Showing posts with label Iodine Deficiency Disorder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iodine Deficiency Disorder. Show all posts

Sunday, 17 July 2011

MALNUTRITION: Nigeria: Saving a child could be down to a couple of nutrients

Anna Angbazo : July 10, 2011


Lead Image
Poor diets retard children’s growth and their development, including their cognitive development. Photo: REUTERS

Although the federal government has expressed its commitment to meeting the Millennium Development Goals, especially as relates to health, some experts say investment in quick gains projects such as improved nutrition would be cheap but eventually productive for the nation.
In 2000, for instance, the World Health Organisation (WHO) ranked Nigeria’s health system 187th out of its 191 member states, particularly due to problems such as hunger and malnutrition, which have become increasingly severe over the years.
Jane Miller, the country representative of UK’s Department for International Development (DFID), explains the rationale behind Nigeria’s poor ranking rather succinctly.
“Malnutrition, malaria and communicable diseases such as measles, diarrhoea and pneumonia significantly contribute to maternal and child mortality and morbidity,” Miller says, adding that “one million Nigerian children under the age of five die each year.”
Malnutrition has been a serious concern to the WHO, which insists that it is by far the major factor behind child mortality, with underweight births and inter-uterine growth restrictions causing 2.2 million child deaths every year.
The global health agency says mothers’ neglect of infants’ breast-feeding also causes about 1.4 million deaths, while describing malnutrition as the most serious single threat to public health across the world.
Linus Awute, the permanent secretary of the Federal Ministry of Health, concedes that Nigeria is one of the countries that are mostly affected by deaths of children under the age of five years due to factors such as malnutrition.
He stresses that over two-thirds of malnutrition-related deaths of children usually occur within the first year of their existence, adding that the children’s undernourishment is associated with inappropriate feeding practices.
“Appropriate feeding of infants and young children remains a key factor in promoting health and child survival. However, many mothers have yet to imbibe the required child-feeding attitudes and practices, in spite of many public sensitisation campaigns,” he says.
Going from the general to the specifics, the WHO says malnutrition is also responsible for about 14 percent of infants born with low birth weights in Nigeria and more than 75 percent of children, under the age of five, who are anaemic.
Mr Awute, on his part, stresses that babies who undergo exclusive breast-feeding do well in their first six months of life, adding, however, that such babies subsequently need adequate and appropriate complementary feeding for them not to become malnourished.
He also said malnutrition usually crops up because of deficiencies of macro- and micro-nutrients in the babies’ food, adding that these deficiencies induce ”protein-energy malnutrition, iron-deficiency anaemia, iodine-deficiency disorders and Vitamin A-deficiency.”
Lawan Tahir, a paediatrician, also called on new parents to ensure that infants are given healthy, balanced diets after stopping their breast-feeding.
“To reduce child mortality, mothers should feed their children with balanced diets after they have been weaned,” he says.

Killer of young ones
Mr Tahir, a senior registrar at the National Hospital, Abuja, who said two out of every three child deaths are related to malnutrition, adding that a malnourished child is prone to numerous diseases because of the child’s poor immune system which cannot resist infections.
After breast-feeding, the next thing most mothers do is introducing the babies to cereals, as the infants feed on mainly carbohydrate diets.
“Nevertheless, what the child needs at that point is actually not carbohydrates alone but proteins, fats and oils, as well as micro-nutrients to enable him or her to have a balanced nutrition,” he said. “Unfortunately, most children are not given well-balanced diets, probably due to their parents’ poverty or ignorance.”
Mr Tahir adds that poor diets retard children’s growth and their development, including their cognitive development. The paediatrician explains that malnutrition is a health condition which signifies poor nutrition, as well as an imbalance between the intake of nutrients and what the body actually requires.
Experts say rising cases of malnutrition in Nigeria can be attributed to the lack of food security in the country, poor feeding habits, waning exclusive breast-feeding of newborn babies and poor quality complementary feeding of infants after the age of six months.
Another paediatrician, Azeez Ibrahim says micro-nutrients deficiency is a direct cause of child mortality.
“Micro-nutrients such as iron, iodine, and Vitamin A are necessary for the healthy development of children, while their absence in diets can cause serious disorders,” he said He, however, said malnutrition is not a health problem of children alone, adding that “many adolescents are also having malnutrition problems and these affect their learning processes and productivity.”
Mr Ibrahim, nonetheless, insists that some cases of malnutrition in adolescents are due to increased intake of carbonated drinks (soft drinks), as such drinks only provide “empty calories” that are insufficient to meet the body’s requirements for proper growth.
“Malnutrition in a female adolescent is worse because as the young ladies prepare for marriage, they need a balanced diet for them to attain their potential as women,” he says.

All together on safety
As part of efforts to foster improved nutrition in Nigeria, the Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN) is working with the federal government via the National Fortification Alliance (NFA). The NFA comprises government regulatory agencies such as National Agency for Food, Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) and the Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON).
Hauwa Keri, NAFDAC’s director of Establishment Inspection, says the aim of the government policy on fortified foods is to get more nutritious staple foods like wheat and maize flour, vegetable oil and sugar into the markets and homes of vulnerable families whose diets lack the essential micro-nutrients.
“The goal of the effort, which began in March 2007, is to change the lives of the citizens by giving them a chance to eat more balanced diets every day,” she says.
Ms Keri stresses that the Federal Government has been leading a national campaign to add essential micro-nutrients to food products such as wheat and maize flour, refined sugar and vegetable oils since 2002.
Besides, Ms Keri said, a pilot programme is underway to fortify table salt with iron so as to provide the needed micronutrients for the people, adding that table salt is already being fortified with iodine.
“The project is at a pilot stage in three zones and it aims at ascertaining whether fortifying salt with iodine and iron will be acceptable,” she says. “It is also at a research and study stage; the outcome of the investigations will determine whether to adopt the iron fortification scheme or not.”
Larry Umunah, the country representative of GAIN, says Nigeria has been identified as one of the countries that are determined to tackle the menace of malnutrition frontally.
He, however, stresses the need to ensure that mothers and children have proper nutrients so as to curb the rising menace of maternal and child mortality in the country.
Umunah said if Nigeria is able to effectively tackle the issue of malnutrition among mothers and children, the country will definitely be in a better position to achieve the health targets of the UN Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
“Ensuring that mothers and children have proper nutrients is of paramount importance. If Nigerian mothers and children are able to have improved nutrients, the country will move toward achieving the MDGs,” he said.
Dr Orhii, the director general of NAFDAC, however, stresses the need for regulatory agencies to enforce the full compliance of food industries with the extant regulation regarding the fortification of their products.
Mr Orhii bemoans the inability of the vast majority of the rural people to have access to fortified foods, adding that the prevalence of ”hidden hunger” among the rural populace has been a source of public health concern.
The NAFDAC director says that fortified foods contain all the essential vitamins that prevent diseases, adding that lack of iodine in salt, for instance, can make a child dull.
“Iodine deficiency can also interfere with the reproductive system of girls in future,” he said. “We insist on the fortification of foods with essential vitamins to prevent diseases which usually affect vulnerable groups like pregnant women and children below the age of five.”
http://234next.com/csp/cms/sites/Next/Home/5728780-146/saving_a_child_could_be_down.csp

Wednesday, 22 December 2010

MALNUTRITION: What is malnutrition?

Diana Nabiruma : 15 December 2010

Malnutrition manifests in two forms; under-nutrition and over-nutrition.
Under-nutrition, according to a booklet titled Malnutrition: Uganda is Paying Too High a Price, “occurs when the body fails to get the right quantities and proportions of nutrients for it to maintain health and proper function.”
In Uganda, under-nutrition mostly occurs in children and it presents with stunting (child being too short for their age) or too thin for their height (wasting). The most severe forms of wasting are marasmus and kwashiorkor.
A nutritionist at Mwanamugimu unit of Mulago hospital says that although signs of marasmus and kwashiorkor are obvious, child caretakers are usually in denial or ignorant of the fact.
According to this nutritionist, caretakers instead blame witchcraft when their children show signs of malnutrition or think their children are simply fat.
As if to demonstrate the point, the day we visit the unit, a father taking care of his daughter bugs the nutritionist to have his child moved to a ward with stabilised children.
“Ono simulwadde. Mutusindike eri,” he says meaning, “This one is not sick. You should send us to the other ward”. However, the child looked wasted, something even the sunny dress she wore couldn‘t hide.
Nutritionists point to poor sanitation and hygiene (which cause diseases like diarrhoea), teenage pregnancies and frequent pregnancies (pregnancies and lactation require high amounts of nutrients which are sometimes not met), poor feeding habits where people feed on only staple foods (usually containing carbohydrates and proteins), poverty and a lack of prioritisation of nutrition by the government as the major causes of malnutrition.
And despite Uganda being a food basket, the nutritionists say all regions are afflicted. Case in point, south-western Uganda has the highest number of stunted children.
Over-nutrition, on the other hand, is a condition that occurs when the “body gets more nutrients than it needs, to the point that the person becomes unhealthy.“ The condition usually presents with obesity and is common in urban areas.

Measures
It is said that malnutrition starts from the womb; when a mother feeds poorly, the child also feeds poorly and it is estimated that one in every 10 children born in Uganda is already malnourished.
This puts the child at risk of dying from diseases like malaria, diarrhoea and HIV/AIDS. The estimated number of child deaths as a result of diseases closely related to malnutrition is 47%.
Overall, 60% of deaths in child deaths are attributed to malnutrition in all its forms (low birth weight, underweight and Vitamin A deficiency). Clearly, there is need to address the problem to reduce child mortality.
In addition, curbing malnutrition would reduce on mental retardation, brain damage and physical disabilities in children. These occur because of an Iodine Deficiency Disorder (IDD), largely found in children from mountainous areas in western Uganda who eat locally mined salt as opposed to iodised salt.
The mothers in these regions also face the same problem, putting their children at the risk of having lower learning abilities, poor speech and hearing disabilities.
In 2009, 2,100 children were born as cretins as a result of IDD in mothers, while those who lack Vitamin A could suffer blindness.
As a measure, Uganda, through the National Development Plan of 2010-2015, hopes to achieve sustainable economic development through increased agricultural productivity, improved health and survival and improved human capacity development through education.

dnabiruma@observer.ug
http://www.observer.ug/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=11357:what-is-malnutrition&catid=58:health-living&Itemid=89