Sun.Star Baguio

Brgy scholars lauded in DOH nutrition program

- PNA

BARANGAY nutrition scholars (BNS) travel kilometers by foot to reach children in farflung communitie­s.

They never complain — despite the measly incentives they get. They are motivated by their desire to help solve the country’s malnutriti­on problem.

And they are considered heroes behind the success of the Philippine Plan of Action for Nutrition (PPAN) ý2017-2022 of the Department of Health (DOH).

In a recent visit here, DOH Assistant Secretary for Health and Executive Director of the National Nutrition Council (NNC) Maria Bernardita Flores acknowledg­ed the important role that barangay nutrition scholars are doing for the country.

“Through the help of BNS, nutrition programs and advocacies can reach even those in the geographic­ally isolated and displaced areas (GIDA), where malnutriti­on prevalence remains high,” Flores said.

“They serve from the heart simply because they want to help out. When faced with resource limitation in the implementa­tion of programs, they look for ways to the point of begging for sponsors who will help them in pursuing their task of providing the necessary health services for the barangay residents, no matter how distant they are from civilizati­on,” she added.

The BNS program is a human resource developmen­t strategy of PPAN, which involves the training, deployment and supervisio­n of volunteer workers.

It mandates the deployment of one BNS in every barangay, which the NNC administer­s with the local government units.

Eden Cordova, president of the Federation of BNS in Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao, said doing good and serving the community through

the program is enough compensati­on for them.

Based on the latest record provided by the NNC in 2015, there are 4.6 million children in the entire country who fall under the category of “stunting” or those who are short in height compared to their age, about a million children are classified as “wasting” or thin for their height who faces a higher risk of death when getting sick.

Under the Duterte administra­tion, the PPAN hopes to cut down, if not eliminate the high number of children who are short, thin, underweigh­t or obese.

The NNC has refocused its attention from merely handling malnourish­ed children, but starting the program from the pregnant women to make them deliver a baby with a birth weight of at least 2.5 kilograms and above.

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