Title: Nutrition and Global Health
1Nutrition and Global Health
- Micheline Beaudry, Ph.D.
- Université Laval
2Learning ObjectivesAt the end of this lecture
you will
- Be aware of the key role played by undernutrition
in the lives of people societies around the
world - Realize that food, though essential, is not
equivalent to nutrition - Know that there are affordable solutions wish
to find out more about them
3At the end of this lecture you will be able to
(performance objectives)
- List the 4 major nutrition problems in the world,
their major manifestations, consequences global
distribution - List the major causes of these problems and
solutions proposed - Convince a friend of the opportunities provided
to improve peoples lives
4The major nutrition problems in the world are
- Protein-energy malnutrition (PEM)
- Iron deficiency
- Vitamin A deficiency or hypovitaminosis A (VAD)
- Iodine deficiency disorders (IDD)
- Nutrition-related chronic diseases
5Protein-energy malnutrition (PEM)
- Stunting
- insufficient height gain relative to age
- implies long-term malnutrition and poor health
- Wasting
- insufficient weight gain relative to
height/losing weight - implies recent/acute malnutrition
- Underweight
- insufficient weight gain relative to age or
losing weight - implies various combinations of stunting and
wasting
6Proportion () of underweight children by region,
1985-1995
7PEM and young child mortality
- Malnutrition potentiates the effect of disease on
child mortality - The effect is for both mild-to-moderate as well
as severe malnutrition it is not only due to
confounding by socioeconomic factors or
intercurrent illness - The effect of malnutrition and infection on child
mortality is multiplicative rather than additive
as was implicitly assumed
8Other consequences of PEM
- Impaired cognitive behavioral development
- Low educability
- Reduced productivity income
- Poor reproductive health
9Causes of malnutrition
Manifestations
Growth, survival and development
Immediate Causes
Diet intake
Disease
CARE practices for mothersch
Underlying Causes
Access to FOOD
HEALTH serv environ.
EDUCATION
Ressources Control Human, Economic
Organizational
Basic Causes
Political, Ideological Economic structure
10To ensure adequate growth nutrition, it is
necessary to facilitate
- The ability of households to provide CARE for
mothers young children (e.g. breast-feeding,
complementary feeding, love...) - Access by households to sufficient FOOD to lead
an active healthy life - Access to adequate HEALTH services (e.g.
immunization) a healthy environment (e.g.
clean water)
11Iron deficiency
- Over 2 billion people suffer from some form of
iron deficiency - Not all causes of anaemia are nutritional in
origin yet anaemia linked to iron and/or folic
acid deficiency is among the worlds major
nutritional disorders - Africa South Asia have the highest overall
incidence of anaemia, followed by Latin America
East Asia
12Consequences of iron deficiency
- Reduces work capacity, thus productivity,
earnings ability to care for children - Associated with 50 of maternal deaths wholly
blamed for up to 20 - Retards fetal growth, causes low birth weight
(LBW) increases infant mortality - Impairs ability to resist disease in childhood,
reduces learning
13Improving Iron status
- Iron tablets (daily vs. weekly)
- Iron fortification of basic foods
- Increased consumption of iron rich foods
factors which enhance absorption - Control of parasitic infections
14Vitamin A deficiency (VAD)
- Subclinical, severe moderate
- 251 million children 0-4 years old
- Clinical (xerophtalmia)
- 2.8 million children 0-4 years old
- Blindness, total or partial
- at least half a million children a year
- about half die within a few months
15Consequences of VAD
- Onset of childhood diseases increases
- Partial or total childhood blindness
- Child mortality increases at least 20-30
- May increase maternal mortality
- May increase HIV transmission
16Improving vitamin A status
- Increased intake of vitamin A rich foods e.g.
eggs, butter, whole milk, liver, red palm oil,
dark green, yellow red fruits vegetables - Fortification of basic foods with vit. A
- Supplements e.g. 2 capsules per year to young
children
17Iodine deficiency disorders (IDD)
- In 1990 1.6 billion people worldwide at risk of
IDD - At least 655 million with goitre
- 43 million with some degree of mental impairment
- 11 million with cretinism
18Other consequences of IDD
- Moderate Iodine deficiency associated with
average reduction of over 13 IQ points - Adequate intake of Iodine can prevent all IDD,
make milder forms of goiter disappear improve
development of older children mildly affected - Severe forms of IDD such as cretinism, cannot be
reversed can only be prevented by adequate
intake of I during pregnancy
19Progress in iodizing salt
- 60 of all edible salt in the world is now
iodized in 1997 - Before 1990, some 40 million children were born
each year at some risk of mental impairment due
to I deficiency in their mothers diets. By 1997
is closer to 28 million
20Improving nutrition can lead future progress in
health and development around the world