Iran Faces Alarming Malnutrition Crisis: Hunger and Poverty Reach New Heights

Iran Faces Alarming Malnutrition Crisis: Hunger and Poverty Reach New Heights

Over 120,000 Iranians die each year due to poor nutrition, highlighting a severe public health crisis in Iran. The alarming statistics reveal that regime policies and economic collapse are pushing millions of citizens to the brink of hunger. Despite these critical issues, Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, continues to promote a narrative of progress and security.

At the recent National Nutrition Conference held on October 20, Ahmad Esmaeilzadeh, the head of the Office for Community Nutrition Improvement, disclosed shocking data: approximately 35% of annual deaths in Iran—around 120,000 individuals—are attributable to inadequate or poor nutrition.

Furthermore, the state-run Mehr News Agency reported a disturbing trend of increased organ sales among impoverished Iranians. This phenomenon cannot merely be dismissed as a “personal decision under temporary financial pressure.” Rising food prices, exorbitant rents, and unattainable medical costs are driving millions of families towards social and physical collapse.

Millions Suffering from Critical Nutrient Shortages

Official statistics reveal a dramatic decline in the consumption of essential food items such as meat, dairy, fruits, and vegetables. This decline is primarily due to soaring prices and diminishing household incomes. The Ministry of Health estimates that annually:

  • 10,000 people die from a lack of omega-3 fatty acids,
  • 10,000 die from insufficient fruit and vegetable intake, and
  • 25,000 die due to low consumption of whole grains.

Additionally, between 50% and 70% of Iran’s population suffers from vitamin D deficiency, which negatively impacts immunity and bone health. Many families can no longer afford nutritious foods, and vitamin supplements have vanished from their shopping lists due to their exorbitant prices.

The situation is particularly dire in underprivileged provinces such as Sistan and Baluchestan, Kerman, and Hormozgan, where poverty and hunger have become embedded in the social fabric. The visible consequences of this crisis include:

  • Child stunting
  • Obesity linked to cheap junk food
  • A surge in chronic diseases such as hypertension and diabetes

According to government data, one in five Iranian children is overweight or obese, and approximately 30% of pregnant women do not gain sufficient weight during their pregnancies.

A Vicious Cycle of Poverty and Hunger

The health crisis in Iran has morphed into a serious economic threat. Families now find themselves spending significantly more to secure a healthy diet, while real incomes have plummeted. This situation has established a vicious cycle of poverty, illness, and malnutrition that is being inherited by future generations.

Esmaeilzadeh cautioned that ongoing iodine deficiency among pregnant women could diminish the next generation’s IQ, posing a long-term threat to Iran’s human capital and economy. Experts now view the malnutrition crisis not merely as a public health issue but as a strategic threat to national stability.

Regime Policies at the Root of Hunger

Analysts attribute the root causes of this humanitarian disaster to the regime’s military and nuclear expenditures. Khamenei’s costly regional interventions and pursuit of nuclear ambitions have resulted in crippling Western sanctions, diverting national wealth away from the populace and towards the regime’s military agenda. The outcome is widespread hunger, poverty, and despair.

Labor expert Hamid Haj-Esmaeili recently indicated that Iran’s poverty line has exceeded 55 million tomans, while the average worker or public employee earns merely 17 million tomans monthly. Consequently, over 70% of the population now experiences severe economic strain, compelling many to seek additional jobs just to survive.

Economic Collapse Fueling the Crisis

Escalating inflation and food prices have ravaged small businesses. Restaurant owners report that rising ingredient costs and dwindling demand have rendered their operations economically unfeasible. Moreover, the housing crisis adds another heavy burden. According to Iran’s Statistical Center, rent now consumes 44% of household expenditures, leaving little for food, transportation, clothing, or utilities.

A recent report from the Parliament’s Research Center indicates that Iran’s economy contracted in the first half of 2025, widening the gap between government propaganda and the stark reality. The World Bank’s latest forecast underscores this trend: every Middle Eastern economy is projected to grow by 2026—except for Iran.

Unemployment remains a chronic driver of poverty, with the latest figures revealing that 40.3% of Iran’s unemployed population holds university degrees. This statistic highlights the regime’s failure to create meaningful employment opportunities, even for educated citizens.

Iran’s malnutrition crisis is no longer an invisible tragedy; it has emerged as a defining symptom of the regime’s economic mismanagement and political priorities. As resources are diverted towards nuclear projects and proxy wars, millions of Iranians are deprived of the most basic human necessity: food.

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