The Philippine Star

Duterte OKs ‘Nutrisyon ng Mag-Nanay’ law

- By ALEXIS ROMERO With Janvic Mateo

President Duterte has signed into law a measure that seeks to provide comprehens­ive health care to mothers and their newborn children in the first 1,000 days of life.

Republic Act 11148 or the “Nutrisyon ng Mag-Nanay (nutrition for mother and child) Act” was signed into law on Nov. 29.

The law seeks to provide comprehens­ive, sustainabl­e, multi-sectoral strategies and approaches to address health and nutrition problems of newborns, infants and young children, pregnant and lactating women and adolescent females.

“First 1,000 days of life” was defined as the period of a child’s life spanning the nine months in the womb starting from conception to the first 24 months of life.

The period is considered to be the “critical window of opportunit­y” to promote health and developmen­t and prevent malnutriti­on and its life-long consequenc­es.

The law aims to provide nutritiona­l supplement­s to women and infants, which includes vaccinatio­n, deworming, vitamin A drops, iron and food supplement.

The law shall be implemente­d at the barangay level through the rural health units and barangay health centers.

The health program shall include health and nutrition services for women in the prenatal period, women about to give birth, women who just gave birth and lactating women.

Health care will also be given during the birth and newborn period and first six months of infancy.

To address malnutriti­on, health and nutrition services will also be given to females aged 10 to 18.

Areas that are hit by disasters and emergency situations will be prioritize­d in the delivery of health and nutrition services.

The health department, National Nutrition Council and the agricultur­e department, in coordinati­on with other state agencies and local government units, are mandated to develop a comprehens­ive strategy for the first 1,000 days of life.

An alliance of children’s rights organizati­ons has welcomed the enactment of the “First 1,000 Days” law.

“Why is the first 1,000 days of child developmen­t important? According to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), over 5.9 million children under five years old worldwide die due to malnutriti­on,” said Child Rights Network (CRN).

“Data from the Food and Nutrition Research Institute gravely complement this WHO figure, with the agency disclosing that almost one in three Filipino children aged zero to two is marked as malnourish­ed in 2013,” CRN added.

“There could be no better way to extend the government’s mantle of social protection than to focus on the first 1,000 days of child developmen­t. Such focused government support will ensure that proper nutrition, care and medical needs are given to those who urgently need it at the most pressing time,” it said.

CRN said the new law could also prove to be economical­ly beneficial in the long run, noting that a joint research of the United Nations Internatio­nal Children’s Fund and the National Nutrition Council showed that every $1 (P53) invested in interventi­ons to combat child malnutriti­on and accompanyi­ng problems can save around $12 (P639) in foregone earnings or health expenditur­es.

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