Pervasive long-term malnutrition is destroying the potential of millions of children by Save the Children International 4:05am 6th Dec, 2012 Dec 2012 As world leaders have been occupied with one economic crisis after another, a hunger and malnutrition crisis affecting millions of children has gone unchecked. While the world has been experiencing years of financial turmoil, pervasive long-term malnutrition is slowly eroding the foundations of the global economy by destroying the potential of millions of children. This crisis is not new. Progress on reducing malnutrition has been pitifully slow for 20 years. But a combination of global trends – climate change, volatile food prices, economic uncertainty and demographic shifts – is putting future progress on tackling malnutrition at risk. Action must be taken now to prevent the crisis deteriorating and more children suffering the life-long consequences. By mid-2013, it will already be too late to make a difference to the last generation of children who will reach their second birthday –a crucial nutrition milestone – by 2015. That’s the deadline for the eight Millennium Development Goals, six of which are dependent in part on tackling malnutrition. Every hour of every day, 300 children die because of malnutrition. It’s an underlying cause of more than a third of children’s deaths – 2.6 million every year. But it’s not recorded on death certificates and, as a result, it’s not effectively addressed. Even for those children who survive, long-term malnutrition causes devastating and irreversible damage. Lack of nutritious food, coupled with infection and illness, means their bodies and brains don’t develop properly. At least 170 million children are affected by stunting. This means that not only are they too short for their age – they’re also likely to enroll at school later and to do less well academically. For example, iodine deficiency, a type of malnutrition caused by a lack of specific nutrients, affects one-third of schoolchildren in developing countries and is associated with a loss of 10–15 IQ points. Childhood malnutrition can lessen productivity – stunted children are predicted to earn an average of 20% less when they become adults. If current trends continue, the lives of more than 450 million children globally will be affected by stunting in the next 15 years. MALNUTRITION: THE TRUE STORY Improving nutrition is key to child survival. It will save many lives and give all children the chance of a good start in life so they can grow up to fulfil their potential. Malnutrition is undermining economic growth and reducing the productivity of people trying to work their way out of poverty in the world’s poorest countries. It’s estimated that 2–3% of the national income of a country can be lost to malnutrition, Improving nutrition is a good investment. The solutions that are outlined in this report are cost-effective and relatively simple to implement. Many of them will pay for themselves in terms of the boost they give the economy of a country and by lowering the cost of healthcare – well nourished children are less prone to disease and illness. Investing in nutrition is investing in the future of a country – it creates stronger communities with a healthier, smarter and more productive population. The world has enough food for everyone, so putting an end to the hunger and malnutrition crisis is the right thing to do. Every child has the right to a life free from hunger. No child should be born to die from a cycle of malnutrition and disease because they are not able to eat enough nutritious food. Improving child nutrition and reducing levels of child mortality can lead to smaller families and more sustainable societies. When children are healthier and more likely to survive, and when parents have access to voluntary family planning methods, many parents will choose to have fewer children, further apart, and to invest in the children who now survive. An added benefit is the reduction in population growth over the long term. WE ALREADY KNOW THE SOLUTIONS THAT WORK Direct Actions: Simple solutions delivered to children who are at risk of malnutrition and their families are already well known and well supported by nutrition experts. In 2008 the Lancet medical journal identified a package of 13 direct interventions – such as vitamin A and zinc supplements, iodised salt, and the promotion of healthy behaviour, including handwashing, exclusive breastfeeding and complementary feeding practices– that were proven to have an impact on the nutrition and health of children and mothers. This cost-effective and affordable package could prevent the deaths of almost 2 million children under five and a substantial amount of illness if it was delivered to children in the 36 countries that are home to 90% of the world’s malnourished children.7 The reason these proven interventions have not been scaled up is due to public policy decisions and chronic under-investment in the health services needed to deliver them. Fortification, or the process of adding vitamins and minerals to food, is one of the most cost-effective direct interventions. Fortification of staple foods during production– for example, adding iron to flour in mills; or through breeding crops that are more nutritious, such as a sweet potato rich in vitamin A that has been introduced in Mozambique – can benefit an entire population. To reach children with fortified foods during the critical periods of growth and development requires a more targeted approach. Commercial fortification of products for 6–24-month-old children by food companies and the addition of micronutrient powders to traditional foods both show promise. At a cost of just over US$1 per person per year, the World Bank has estimated that more than 4 billion people would be able to benefit from access to fortified wheat, iron, complementary food and micronutrient powders. Protecting families from poverty: Poverty is one of the main underlying causes of malnutrition. For many families, their children become malnourished and stunted not because there is no nutritious food available, but because they cannot afford to buy it. Save the Children’s research shows that a significant proportion of families in communities in Bangladesh, Ethiopia and Kenya could not afford to feed their families a nutritious diet even if they spent all of their income on food. In cases like this, providing families with cash or food to keep them above the poverty line and protect children from malnutrition can be the best solution. Social protection schemes – which provide families with regular cash transfers or food parcels that provide a safety net during hard times – have proved successful in many countries in protecting families from the worst effects of poverty. These types of schemes have been gaining global momentum in recent years. Pioneered in Latin American countries in the last decade, they have now been introduced or are being considered in many other countries. Brazil, for example, has shown how investing in social protection can dramatically reduce hunger and malnutrition, and also contribute to economic growth. Widespread implementation of social protection has real potential to reduce global malnutrition. To achieve this, it’s vital that schemes are linked specifically to nutrition and that they target pregnant and breastfeeding mothers and children up to the age of two. Making the global food system work for nutrition: The global system by which food is produced, distributed and consumed is currently failing to meet the nutritional needs of much of the world’s population. Making the food system work for nutrition means more than simply increasing production – more food does not automatically mean better nutrition. The focus must be on the final outcome – improving children’s diets. Investing in small farmers and female farmers is key – three-quarters of Africa’s malnourished children live on small farms and 43% of agricultural work is carried out by women.11 Success depends on ensuring local markets are accessible and functioning; on improving education about nutrition; and on investing in better research and evidence. This challenge is especially urgent at a time when the world’s food system is under threat from global trends, such as population growth and climate change. a life free from hunger GALVANISING POLITICAL COMMITMENT Underlying the need for these direct and intermediate solutions is an urgent requirement for world leaders to recognize the key role of nutrition in saving children’s lives. They must dedicate the necessary time and resources to ending the malnutrition crisis. Hunger and malnutrition are political problems and therefore need political solutions. The responsibility for action rests on the shoulders of three different – but interconnected – groups of world leaders. First, the countries with high numbers of malnourished children must be committed to improving nutrition. Brazil, Bangladesh and Ghana have shown that it is possible to achieve significant reductions in the percentage of under-fives who are malnourished. Their example can inspire other countries to take action to address the nutrition crisis for the poorest people on the scale needed. This is particularly important in countries that are home to a large number of stunted children, such as India and Nigeria. Second, the existing global institutions that have a mandate to tackle hunger and malnutrition lack a coherent strategy to improve nutrition. The lives of millions of children depend on the leaders of these agencies making the system work for nutrition. Third, for far too long rich country governments did not give nutrition the support it deserved. This has been improving in recent years, and political momentum is growing, particularly through processes like the Scaling Up Nutrition movement, but nutrition is still poorly understood and poorly resourced. Tackling the global malnutrition crisis needs concerted and coordinated global action. And it needs strong leadership. Ultimately, world leaders can set in motion the most fundamental improvements by taking high-level political action, whether that is by hosting an international summit on nutrition to build momentum, by starting a national social protection scheme or by allocating more funding to nutrition. 2012 is a vital year to get nutrition right for children and to end the hidden malnutrition crisis. By mid-2013, it will already be too late to provide protection from stunting for the last generation of children who will reach their second birthday – a key nutrition milestone – by the MDG deadline. Significant progress has already been made in saving children’s lives. The number of children not making it to their fifth birthday has fallen from 12 million in 1990 to 7.6 million in 2011. Momentum is building – in 2011 world leaders made critical progress on immunization by pledging to vaccinate 250 million children by 2015, saving 4 million lives, and 40 countries committed to filling the 3.5 million health workers gap. Action must continue on both these fronts. At the same time we must accelerate efforts to improve nutrition, which holds the key to further progress in saving children’s lives. INVESTING IN NUTRITION IS INVESTING IN THE FUTURE OF SIX KEY STEPS TO TACKLING MALNUTRITION We’re calling for national and international action on six key steps to tackle the global malnutrition crisis head on: 1. Make malnutrition visible: Chronic malnutrition is a hidden killer that kills slowly and doesn’t appear on death certificates. In order to make the deaths of these children count and to make governments accountable for preventing them, there must be an agreed global target for a reduction in stunting in the countries with the highest burden. 2. Invest in direct interventions: The cost of scaling up the ‘Lancet package’ of 13 interventions, including fortification, is $10–12bn a year. Shared between developing and donor governments, this sum is easily affordable. It could save 2 million lives. 3. Fill the health worker gap: There is a critical shortage of at least 3.5 million doctors, nurses, midwives and community health workers, who are vital in delivering the direct interventions that can improve nutrition. Governments and donors should work together to fill this health worker gap by recruiting, training and supporting new and existing health workers, and deploying them where they are most needed. 4. Protect families from poverty: Many of the best examples of progress in tackling malnutrition have come from countries that have invested in effective social protection policies that reach vulnerable families. Countries should work towards establishing systems that reach pregnant and breastfeeding women, and children under two. 5. Harness agriculture to help tackle malnutrition: Governments must support small-scale farmers and female farmers, and ensure that making a positive impact on nutrition is an explicit objective of agriculture policies, by focusing on projects that are designed to improve children’s diet – for example, home gardening or education projects that focus on nutrition. 6. Galvanize political leadership: Raising the profile of malnutrition requires a build-up of political momentum to galvanize change. The US G8 and the Mexican G20 in 2012, and the UK G8 in 2013 all offer major opportunities for progress, as food, nutrition and social protection are likely to be on the agenda. These countries should work together to ensure an ambitious action plan that aligns institutional reform with clear delivery of new resources. With the support of the international community, countries with high malnutrition burdens should exhibit the leadership and commitment needed to eliminate malnutrition. http://www.savethechildren.net/sites/default/files/libraries/A_Life_Free_From_Hunger_EOlowres-Africa-b_0.pdf (116 pages) Visit the related web page |
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