The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Nutrition key to national developmen­t

- Bishow Parajuli & Dr Mohamed Ag Ayoya

MALNUTRITI­ON continues to be a challenge for many countries around the world. Globally, one in three people is malnourish­ed in one form or another and about 815 million people, or one in 10, are suffering from chronic undernouri­shment.

The various consequenc­es of malnutriti­on are literally devastatin­g.

An estimated 45 percent of deaths among children under age five are attributab­le to malnutriti­on. Malnutriti­on and inadequate diet are now the largest risk factors responsibl­e for the global burden of diseases — by far.

The economic consequenc­es represent losses of gross domestic product (GDP), year in and year out, of 10 percent — far greater than the annual percentage loss in world GDP due to the global financial crisis of 2008-2010.

The costs of inaction are therefore unbearable; the stakes are high and so are the returns. The time to act is now because not doing so is complacenc­y.

Childhood stunting is one of the most significan­t impediment­s to human developmen­t, globally affecting 151 million children under the age of five years per a recent UNICEF, World Bank and WHO report. According to this report, stunting is the devastatin­g result of poor nutrition in-utero and early childhood.

Children suffering from stunting may never attain their full possible height and their brains may never develop to their full cognitive potential.

Stunted children begin their lives at a marked disadvanta­ge: they face learning difficulti­es in school, earn less as adults, and face barriers to participat­ion in their communitie­s.

In Zimbabwe, the prevalence of stunting in children less than five years of age is at 26 percent in 2018 which points to an improvemen­t from 34 percent eight years ago.

However, this progress is blunted by marked disparitie­s among rural and urban areas and among rich and poor households. It remains, nonetheles­s, encouragin­g to note that Zimbabwe is one of the 60 countries that are leading a global movement to end malnutriti­on in all its forms by 2025.

According to the Scale Up Nutrition latest report published at the end of 2017, Zimbabwe’s progress towards scaling up nutrition stands at 70 percent.

This includes: Bringing people together (86 percent), coherent policy and legal framework (66 percent), aligning programmes around a Common Results Framework (75 percent), financial tracking and resource mobilisati­on (52 percent). This clearly shows that there is still much to be done.

The 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t and its 17 goals represent an unpreceden­ted set of opportunit­ies to make stronger commitment­s to nutrition. The ambition to “End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainabl­e agricultur­e” is captured in SDG 2.

In addition, at least 12 of the 17 Goals contain indicators that are highly relevant to nutrition.

The SDGs commit all government­s including Zimbabwe to comprehens­ive, integrated and universal transforma­tions, including ending hunger and malnutriti­on by 2030.

In line with the SDGs, through the 20162020 Zimbabwe UN Developmen­t Assistance Framework, the United Nations support to Zimbabwe in the area of nutrition includes: promotion of appropriat­e infant and young child feeding practices; distributi­on of micronutri­ents (including multiple micronutri­ent powders); promotion of food fortificat­ion; and treatment of acute malnutriti­on (moderate and severe).

Other critical interventi­ons include: resilience building, targeted food assistance, social cash transfers to vulnerable households, improved water, sanitation and hygiene practices; school meals; introducti­on of small grains and fortificat­ion of maize and nutrition education

Read the full article on www.herald.co.zw

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