Monday, 29 October 2012

MALNUTRITION: CNN and UNICEF Raise Awareness of the Silent Emergency of Child Stunting


UNICEF

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© UNICEF/MLIA2012-00029/Dicko
Konate, 12 months old, in Djenne, Mali, suffers from stunted growth and severe malnutrition. Damage from stunting is irreversible.
NEW YORK (October 25, 2012) — CNN has partnered with UNICEF to put the international spotlight on the global crisis of stunting, or low height for age in children. About 165 million children under the age of five suffer from stunting, with more than 90% of them living in Africa and Asia. 
Stunting is a hidden tragedy—the outcome of chronic nutritional deficiency during the first 1,000 days of a child’s life. The damage it causes to a child’s development is irreversible. That child will never learn, nor earn, as much as she or he could have, if properly nourished in early life.

Tackling Undernutrition

Tackling the problem of undernutrition, which leads to stunting, is achievable and cost effective. Leading development experts have ranked providing young children with micronutrients as the most cost-effective way to advance global welfare.
UNICEF is a leader in a global effort to deliver a life-saving package of interventions to the world’s poorest communities during the critical 1,000-day period. These interventions include: promoting breastfeeding and good infant and child feeding practices; micronutrient supplementation and fortification; treatment of severe acute malnutrition; and community support for nutrition programming.
Children worldwide have the same capacity to reach their height potential if they receive adequate nutrition, their caregivers follow recommended feeding, care and health practices, and they grow up in healthy environments. By raising awareness of this problem, CNN is helping to make this happen.

CNN and UNICEF, Partners in Awareness-Raising

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© UNICEF/NYHQ2008-0051/Turnley
UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador David Beckham holds two-day-old Mariatsu. He is accompanying community health workers on a home visit, in the town of Mangorea in Sierra Leone.Tackling the undernutrition that leads to stunting is achievable.
CNN has worked with UNICEF to tell the story of stunting, starting with CNN.com, where essays by world-class footballer and UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador David Beckham and internationally acclaimed actress and UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador Mia Farrow have been highlighted. CNN’s Mallika Kapur has reported on an Indian state’s battle to build up its babies.
CNN has also visited three countries in which stunting is a problem and is airing the pieces on CNN International, bringing the problem to life by showing mothers and children who are suffering from undernutrition.
In Afghanistanthe story is told in the context of a country ravaged by many years of war.
In Kenya, undernutrition has had profound effects on child development. Grammy Award winner and UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador Angelique Kidjo has visited Samburu, in northern Kenya, and expressed her concerns about the problem.
CNN has also traveled to India to report on the stunting epidemic in that country.
Christiane Amanpour is drawing attention to the issue on her CNN showby interviewing Ms. Kidjo and UNICEF Executive Director Anthony Lake.
CNN has also posted links to other relevant stories on their website, from the Sahel, Mauritania and Yemen.
More About UNICEF’s Work in the Area of Stunting:

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