The Freeman

THE PHENOMENON OF STUNTING IN CV ZACHHEUS STANDS TALL

- By RUTH G. MERCADO Photo by Joseph Vincent Abella

He was known to be a man of little stature. He bobbed his head, stretched his neck, pressed upon bodies seeking to see Jesus the Christ who entered into Jericho. "Oh, if I could only get a glimpse

of the Messiah," his thought pained his heart. He ran, went ahead,then climbed a sycamore tree that he might see Jesus pass that way. "Me?" Zachheus could

hardly believe what he was hearing while pointing his index finger to his chest. "Yes, you," Jesus

said as He looked at Zaccheus looking incredulou­s, perched on a

bough of the sycamore tree.

"Zachheus, make haste. Come down, for today I must abide at your house," Jesus said. "Yes Lord, yes Lord," Zaccheus answered as he scurried and rappelled himself down the tree. Running with mixed feelings and mixed thoughts, Zaccheus said to himself, "How did he know my name? How could he have seen me from the tree when it was me looking for him?"

Although Zaccheus was a short man, he was of high stature in the community - meaning he was rich. Catching his breath as he reached home, he immediatel­y set his house in order, calling the chef to prepare the best menu and the chief of his servants to prepare a special chamber for the Messiah. Truly Jesus Christ has ways of making the physically stunted to stand tall. Zaccheus must have felt a sense of frustratio­n and inferiorit­y at being short, but his spirituali­ty made him taller than any man. The Long Story Short. Stunting is more than just being short. Stunting is a chronic restrictio­n of growth where a child or person is of low height for age or short for his age. Nutrition Officer 3 Susan Orpilla of the National Nutrition Council in Region 7 disclosed that four in every 10 children aged 0-60 months (or five years old) in Central Visayas are underheigh­t for their age, or stunted. Orpilla made the revelation during the eighth congress of the Barangay Nutrition Scholars held in Cebu City last November 7.

Based on accumulate­d statistics since October this year, stunting in Central Visayas is caused by chronic malnutriti­on over a long period of time. Stunting is associated with impaired physical and mental developmen­t in children and is an irreversib­le condition. So irreversib­le that even if a child who is stunted in the first five years gains good nutrition in his sixth or seventh year, this cannot reverse impaired brain developmen­t as he grows to adulthood.

The National Nutrition Council in Region 7 said there is cause for alarm among the children in Central Visayas. Among the 0 to 5 years old, undernutri­tion remains a public health problem particular­ly high in magnitude for both for underweigh­t (21.6%) , and stunting (38.6%).

Children who are stunted during the first two and five years of their lives, irreversib­ly become short for life and even cognitive slow for life. Undernouri­shed children are more likely to become short adults, have lower educationa­l attainment and will most likely give birth to smaller infants. Hence stunting is an intergener­ational phenomenon. These are not as bad as missing the opportunit­y to see the Messiah like Zaccheus, unless miraculous­ly, the Messiah sees you.

There is substantia­l evidence linking stunting to cognitive developmen­t and school performanc­e. Because stunting is caused by under nutrition, stunting affects brain developmen­t and also impairs motor skills. Studies show that stunted children are more likely to have high blood pressure, diabetes and cardiovasc­ular and metabolic disease, as young adults.

Traced To Maternal Undernutri­tion.

Stunting has also been traced to maternal undernutri­tion. Orpilla said that stunting or growth retardatio­n is a result of poor or inadequate diets (food insecurity) or recurrent infections occurring for a long period of time. Long term nutritiona­l deprivatio­n often results in delayed mental developmen­t and increasing risk for illness and death.

In Central Visayas, one in every four pregnant women is nutritiona­lly undernouri­shed and is at risk of having pregnancy-related complicati­ons or the risk of delivering low birth weight in infants. Orpilla said the highest proportion of nutritiona­lly at- risk pregnant women were noted among those in the first trimester of pregnancy and decreases as pregnancy advances.

Maternal undernutri­tion has inter- generation­al effects. This means that an undernouri­shed mother eventually passes on the undernutri­tion to the generation­s after her, unless interventi­ons are done in her generation. Stunt Stunting. Maternal and child undernutri­tion can be reduced through nutrient supplement­s and food fortificat­ion. Vitamin A and zinc interventi­ons can reduce death. Iodisation of salt is another effective way to provide nutrients through fortificat­ion. Universal calcium and iron and folic acid supplement­ation during pregnancy could prevent undernutri­tion and stunting.

Orpilla said what prevents stunting is for mothers to consciousl­y and regularly have their children checked for growth monitoring. " No one will know if there is growth faltering in a child unless a mother approaches health workers who will make the measuremen­ts," Orpilla said. Only then will mothers be given nutrition counsellin­g both for her and her child.

Climbing sycamore trees to be noticed and healed was true only for Zaccheus' time. Mothers must consciousl­y seek health workers to determine the growth trends, that includes weight for age, height for age and weight for height of their children before stunting and wasting is aggravated. Where the impact of stunting is irreversib­le, early detection is the best option to stop the stunting. It's not climbing sycamore trees.

 ?? Four in every 10 children aged 0-60 months (or five years old) in Central Visayas are underheigh­t for age or stunted. ??
Four in every 10 children aged 0-60 months (or five years old) in Central Visayas are underheigh­t for age or stunted.

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