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Hunger is number one on the list of the world’s top 10 health risks
by World Food Programme (WFP)
10:26am 31st Dec, 2012
 
What effect does hunger have on children and what can we do to help them? Here is a list of facts that go some way to explaining why hunger is the single biggest solvable problem facing the world today.
  
One in every eight people on Earth goes to bed hungry each night. (Source: FAO, 2012)
  
For some developing countries, the prevalence of undernourishment has fallen from some 23 to 15 percent over the period 1990–2010 (Source: FAO, 2012)
  
Most of the progress against hunger was achieved before 2007/08. Since then, global progress in reducing hunger has slowed and levelled off. (Source: FAO, 2012)
  
Hunger is number one on the list of the world’s top 10 health risks. It kills more people every year than AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis combined. (Source: UNAIDS, 2010; WHO, 2011).
  
A third of all deaths in children under the age of five in developing countries are linked to undernutrition. (Source: IGME, 2011)
  
The first 1,000 days of a child’s life, from pregnancy through age two, are the critical window in which to tackle undernutrition. A proper diet in this period can protect children from the mental and physical stunting that can result from malnutrition. (Source: IGME, 2011)
  
It costs just US $0.25 per day to provide a child with all of the vitamins and nutrients he or she needs to grow up healthy. (Source: WFP, 2011)
  
If women in rural areas had the same access to land, technology, financial services, education and markets as men, the number of hungry people could be reduced by 100-150 million. (Source: FAO, 2011)
  
By 2050, climate change and erratic weather patterns will have push tens of millions children into hunger. Almost half of these children will live in sub-Saharan Africa. (Source: WFP, 2009)
  
From conflict Syria and Congo, to the drought in the Sahel region of Africa, 2012 threw up a challenging sequence of emergencies to WFP and its humanitarian partners. http://www.wfp.org/stories/snapshots-2012
  
Hunger is the single biggest solvable problem facing the world today. Here are effective strategies for fighting hunger. http://www.wfp.org/stories/hunger-worlds-greatest-solvable-problem

 
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