Africa
Fighting Back Against "Hidden Hunger" in Children
Controlling Vitamin and Mineral Deficiency Could "Fast-track"
Region's Development Prospects, According to New Report
JOHANNESBURG, 7 October 2004 - A report released today says that
Africa is fighting back against vitamin and mineral deficiencies, saving
millions of women and children from death and debilitation through simple,
cost effective strategies such as fortifying staple foods. But millions
of children can still be helped if current strategies and partnerships
are extended to reach every country and every child.
Several countries in sub-Saharan Africa have made tremendous progress
in ensuring that women and children have access to essential vitamins
and minerals - easing the suffering of "hidden hunger" which still leaves
millions on the brink of survival. Micronutrient malnutrition is recognized
as one of the most serious obstacles to human development and survival
by the West African Health Organization (WAHO) and is at the forefront
of WAHO's agenda, their commitment and support being critical to those
nations which are grappling with competing priorities and scarce resources
to address vitamin and mineral deficiencies.
According to the report by UNICEF, the WHO, the New Economic Partnership
for African Development (NEPAD), the Development Bank of Southern Africa
(DBSA), the Micronutrient Initiative (MI), and the Global Alliance for
Improved Nutrition (GAIN), over two-thirds of the populations in sub-Saharan
Africa have access to iodized salt and millions of children have been
reached with vitamin A supplements. Countries like Eritrea, the Democratic
Republic of Congo, Kenya and Nigeria have made progress under difficult
circumstances but competing priorities and insufficient capacity are
holding back progress in other countries.
Yet ending vitamin and mineral deficiency could be a major catalyst
for Africa to achieve the Millennium Development Goals of eradicating
extreme poverty and hunger, improving maternal health, and reducing
child deaths by two-thirds by 2015.
"By controlling these deficiencies in children, African nations have
a great opportunity to advance the development of the entire continent
in a relatively short time," says Kul Gautam, UNICEF's Deputy Executive
Director. "We have the right strategies - food fortification, supplementation
and basic nutritional education - and the right partnerships to implement
them. The challenge is simply our will to reach out to every child."
Malnutrition is still a major underlying cause of child mortality in
Africa, where one in five children will never live to see their fifth
birthday. And older children struggle to thrive when their bodies and
minds are weakened by lack of these tiny but vital essentials, holding
back productivity and national economic development.
"Micronutrient deficiency also has many invisible economic effects that
are widely underestimated," said Jay Naidoo, Chairperson of the Development
Bank of Southern Africa, "because they sap the energy of working-age
people and hurt the learning ability of children, causing billions of
dollars in lost productivity in developing countries that can least
afford it."
"Resources and technologies to bring vitamin and mineral deficiency
under control do exist," said Venkatesh Mannar, President of the Micronutrient
Initiative. "What we need is the will and the action to mobilize resources
and deploy technologies to fix this problem. The return on our investment
will be huge."
Reaching out to particularly vulnerable population groups - young children
and women -fortifying staple foods with essential vitamins and minerals
and providing supplements to those at highest risk of vitamin and mineral
deficiency are some of the necessary actions highlighted by the report.
While it has been known for years that the lack of key vitamins and
minerals inflicts anaemia, cretinism and blindness, attention in the
last decade has shifted to the economic and social impact on populations.
Vitamin and mineral deficiencies impair intellectual development, compromise
immune systems, provoke birth defects and consign millions to living
below their full physical and mental potential. It is estimated that
vitamin and mineral deficiencies are costing sub-Saharan economies more
than $2.3 billion in lost productivity.
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For further information, please contact:
Lisa Thomas, Tel: +27 11 548 2000, thomasl@fleishman.co.za
Belinda Mills, Tel: +27 11 548 2000 millsb@fleishman.co.za
Joanne Sewell, Tel: +27 11 548 2000, sewellj@fleishman.co.za
Claire Hajaj, Tel: +1 212 326 7566, chajaj@unicef.org
The Micronutrient initiative, Tel: + 1 (613) 782 6800, mi@micronutrient.org