The Freeman

LGUs told to prioritize nutrition

-

All local government units in the country are called on to prioritize and to allocate funding for their health and nutrition programs in a bid to address malnutriti­on.

Eduardo Año, officer-in-charge of the Department of Interior and Local Government (DILG), said LGUs must give priority to health and nutrition in support of Duterte administra­tion’s 10-point economic agenda.

He also directed all LGUs to ensure that priority Philippine Plan of Action for Nutrition (PPAN) programs are included in the Provincial Developmen­t Physical Framework Plans, Comprehens­ive Developmen­t Plans, and Local Developmen­t Investment Programs or Annual Investment Program.

Budget Secretary Benjamin Diokno, on the other hand, enjoined all LGUs to prioritize the allocation­s for the projects and activities included in their respective local nutrition action plans.

The Department of Budget and Management (DBM) and the DILG recently issued their respective memoranda backing the implementa­tion of PPAN from 2017 to 2022, the country’s blueprint of actions for nutrition improvemen­t.

Under the PPAN, the "ambitious" target is to reduce stunting from the current 33.4 percent to 21 percent.

The PPAN, which is anchored on the Philippine Developmen­t Plan, is the country’s contributi­on to the attainment of the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs), particular­ly SDG 2 which is to end hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition, and promote sustainabl­e agricultur­e.

PPAN 2017-2022 also aims to support the World Health Assembly Global Targets to improve maternal, infant, and young child nutrition by 2025.

Parolita Mission, National Nutrition Council in Central Visayas (NNC-7) program coordinato­r, said malnourish­ed or stunted children would affect the economy in the long run as the latter would become unproducti­ve members of the society.

In yesterday’s second quarter meeting of Central Visayas’ Media Informatio­n Network for Nutrition and Developmen­t, NNC-7’s media network, Mission said the country is losing P220 million a year due to malnutriti­on.

Based on the 2015 National Nutrition Survey of the Food and Nutrition Research Institute (FNRI), 3.8 million children or 33.4 percent are stunted while 807,057 or 7.1 percent are considered wasted in the Philippine­s.

The Philippine­s would remain in the quagmire of poverty if the problem is not addressed properly, according to a health official.

NNC, in a statement, said malnutriti­on is a multi-faceted problem, requiring comprehens­ive interventi­ons to stop or reduce reduction.

"It is critical that all LGUs have functional local nutrition committees to efficientl­y and effectivel­y implement and manage the nutrition," the council said.

As key to achieving improvemen­ts in nutritiona­l outcomes, PPAN’s strategic thrusts are the first 1,000 days in life, complement­ation of nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive programs, intensifie­d mobilizati­on of LGUs, and reaching geographic­ally isolated and disadvanta­ges areas (GIDAs) and communitie­s of indigenous peoples.

The new PPAN features eight nutritions­pecific programs devised to address the immediate causes of malnutriti­on: inadequate food and nutrient intake, poor care-giving and parenting practices, and infectious diseases.

This will be complement­ed by nutritions­ensitive programs already existing in developmen­tal programs that can be tweaked to produce nutritiona­l outcomes. These programs will be done through the intensive mobilizati­on of LGUs and will involve capacitybu­ilding and mentoring on nutrition program management.

NNC through its regional offices will provide technical assistance to LGUs in the preparatio­n, monitoring, and evaluation of their nutrition action plans to ensure the intensifie­d implementa­tion of PPAN.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines