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    Home / Central Data Catalog / IND_1995_NSS52-SCH1.0_V01_M / variable [F2]
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National Sample Survey 1995-1996 (52nd Round) - Schedule 1.0 - Consumer Expenditure

India, 1995 - 1996
Reference ID
IND_1995_NSS52-SCH1.0_v01_M
Producer(s)
National Sample Survey Organisation
Metadata
DDI/XML JSON
Created on
Sep 15, 2013
Last modified
Mar 29, 2019
Page views
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  • Data files
  • NSS52_Sch1_bk_1_2_3
  • NSS52_Sch1_bk_4
  • NSS52_Sch1_bk_5_5-1
  • NSS52_Sch1_bk_6
  • NSS52_Sch1_bk_7
  • NSS52_Sch1_bk_8
  • NSS52_Sch1_bk_9
  • NSS52_Sch1_bk_10
  • NSS52_Sch1_bk_11-1
  • NSS52_Sch1_bk_11-2

No. of Meals per day (B4_v15)

Data file: NSS52_Sch1_bk_4

Overview

Valid: 238515
Invalid: 0
Minimum: 0
Maximum: 3
Mean: 2.425
Standard deviation: 0.552
Type: Continuous
Decimal: 0
Start: 61
End: 61
Width: 1
Range: -
Format:

Questions and instructions

Literal question
How many meals does the household usually take every day?
Interviewer instructions
The number of meals consumed by a person is usually reported as 2 or 3. In rare cases, one may come across a person who may be taking food only once in a day or more than three times a day. While in the former case the number of meals for the person will be 1 per day, in the latter case, however, only 3 should be entered. That is, in this column, the recorded number of meals taken in a day, even if it is reported to be higher, should not exceed 3. A breast-fed baby does not directly share the food consumed by members of the household. Hence for such babies the entry in this column will be '0'.

Description

Definition
Meal
A 'Meal' is composed of one of more readily cat able (generally cooked) items of food, the usual major constituent of which is cereal food. The meals consumed by a person twice or thrice a day provide him/her the required energy of (calorie) and other nutrients for living and for pursuing his/her normal avocations. A 'meal' as opposed to 'snacks ' as opposed to 'snacks', 'nasta' or 'high tea' , contains larger quantum and variety of food. In rare cases, a full meal may contain larger quantity of non-cereal food. Even that, if the total quantum of food in plate is heavy as a meal, the contents of the food plate will also be considered as a real. Sometimes the contents of a 'nasta' may not be very different from the contents of a 'meal'. The difference in quantity will there be the guiding factor for deciding whether the plate is to be led as a 'meal ' or a nasta.
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