The severe vitamin and mineral deficiencies, muscle loss and repeated illness associated with SAM, makes children lose their appetite and catch opportunistic infections. This poses a serious threat to the child’s life. For a child with SAM to survive, repeated infections require repeated treatment, often needing specialised in-patient care at tertiary facilities. For poor and marginalized families, a child with SAM not only is a cause of deep concern and distress but also observes them strain their financial resources; often taking on loans at exorbitant interest rates to meet out of pocket expenses for treatment and care of the child. The children also end up missing school, and for the socio-economically vulnerable population, that means not just missing out on education, but also the mid-day meals, which may be the one nutritious meal of the day they otherwise consume. Missing school creates barriers to the child’s intellectual development, emotional wellbeing, and may lead to the child dropping out of school altogether. In resource poor settings, lack of education and opportunities for safe and reliable livelihoods, in turn, push these children towards delinquency.