THISDAY

Protein Nutrition: Roadmap to a Healthy Future

- Reginald Onabu

The journey of life runs from childbirth to senescence. One activity that remains constant throughout this journey is daily nutrition. The foods we consume daily constitute our daily diets, which is connected to our health and wellbeing. We must certainly eat and nourish ourselves regularly for our nutrition, growth and developmen­t. Nutrition involves more than simply eating a “good” diet; it is about nourishmen­t on every level. This includes eating balanced, quality food, drinking clean water and eating natural fruits with nutritious value.

An aspect of nutrition that has been neglected, especially in Nigeria, is protein nutrition. Protein nutrition is the formation of a diet that has a larger protein percentage per calorie than carbohydra­tes, lipids, and fat.

Calories are micro-units of energy that constitute the basic nutrients in all food sources. However, modern Nigerian diets usually emphasize carbohydra­tes and fats as the main course, while relegating proteins to the background.

The Nigeria Protein Deficiency report shows that proteins are rarely included in regular diets across all states. Highlights of the report indicate that carbohydra­tes are the most consumed food amongst Nigerians. Rice topped the list with 91 per cent, closely followed by ‘swallows’ (such as eba, pounded yam, etc.) at 83 per cent.

This shows the predominan­ce of carbohydra­tes over protein rich-foods, which cuts across all regions in the nation.

Further analysis revealed that other carbohydra­tes like bread and pasta are consumed in large quantities, making up over 80 per cent of the daily diets, especially amongst the lower socio-economic classes.

This is a far cry from the Recommende­d Dietary Allowance (RDA) set by the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) and the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO).

The Recommende­d Dietary Allowance (RDA) for protein is 0.8 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight. The RDA is the amount of a food nutrient needed to meet the basic nutritiona­l requiremen­ts. In a sense, it is the minimum amount the body needs to keep from getting ill — not the specific amount that is supposed to be eaten every day.

The implicatio­n of this dietary habit of consuming high carbohydra­te, high-calorie foods is protein deficiency. This deficiency is a lack of essential protein nutrients in the daily diet and it is the consequenc­e of primary malnutriti­on that occurs when there is no protein in our staple food.

Protein deficiency is strongly associated with ill health, as both a cause and consequenc­e. People who are protein deficient are more susceptibl­e to diseases and infections due to a weakened immune system and tend to take longer to recover from incidents of illness.

Protein deficiency invariably leads to a plethora of illnesses, including marasmus, psoriasis, edema, stunting and kwashiorko­r. Kwashiorko­r is a condition whereby an individual’s bio ketogenic cells are being burnt out in the body to sustain the internal metabolism of the human system.

The resulting symptoms include severe weight loss, swollen abdomen, and hair loss.

No state in Nigeria is free of protein deficiency and many families in rural and urban communitie­s struggle with all of these forms of protein-energy deficienci­es at the same time.

Nigeria can resolve these issues and build a stable, healthy future. The question is, how? The solution is protein nutrition.

Protein nutrition must be given priority. The regular nutrition pattern must gradually change and all dietary intakes should have some form of protein food source. This will go a long way to reduce the levels of protein deficiency in the nation.

The government could enact a proteincen­tred food policy that would involve adding proteins to staple foods during processing to enhance their nutritiona­l quality.

The government could also develop proteincen­tred plans, decisions and strategies in food cultivatio­n, production, processing, packaging and consumptio­n; ensuring that proteins are utilized to augment food sources.

An effective approach will be to create public awareness of the benefits of a protein-centred nutrition. People should be encouraged to eat soybeans, legumes, groundnuts, eggs, quinoa daily. The Nigeria Protein Awareness Campaign or Protein Challenge is one of the players operating in this space. Protein Challenge is a protein pull media campaign that seeks to create awareness about the prevalence, status and impact of protein deficiency in Nigeria.

Proteins should be the main course. The narrative should be “more protein, more life”, as every cell in the human body contains protein. We all need protein in our diets to help our bodies repair cells and make new ones. Proteins are also important for growth and developmen­t in children, teens, and pregnant women.

Once people begin to grasp the tremendous benefits proteins offer, nutritious habits nationwide will change.

Life, they say, is a process, and a child that is born today cannot become an adult overnight; so is healthy nutrition. It is a gradual process. Protein nutrition will pave the way for a healthy future.

t 0OBCV 3FTFBSDIFS BOE 1VCMJD 3FMBUJPOT 0GmDFS XSJUFT GSPN -BHPT

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria