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November 9, 2013 | Half of world’s hungry children live in South Asia | The underdeveloped world has made considerable progress towards reducing child malnutrition, but there are still far too many children who don’t receive sufficient nutritious foods. Severe challenges, therefore, lie ahead which can be met fully only by well-targeted state intervention, says a report. |
London: The developing world has less than 5 per cent chance of meeting the United Nations’ target of halving the proportion of children who suffer from hunger by 2015 compared with 1990 levels, according to a systematic analysis of data on children’s height and weight. Although the nutritional status of children under five has improved overall since 1985, one in five infants and children in developing
countries is still moderately or severely underweight, amounting to an estimated 110 million children worldwide. Another 148 million are mildly underweight. The
UN set the target as part of its Millennium Development Goals. This new analysis,
led by Professor Majid Ezzati from the School of Public Health at Imperial College,
London, estimates that while 61 out of the 141 developing countries studied are
likely to meet this target, the developing world as a whole has less than a 5
percent chance of succeeding. Progress has been uneven between regions, with Asia
and Latin America making the strongest improvements and sub-Saharan Africa falling
behind. Because nutrition has a strong effect on children’s growth, nutritional
status in children can be assessed using scores based on their height and weight
relative to their age, called height-for-age and weight-for-age Z scores (HAZ
and WAZ). Researchers from Imperial College London, the World Health Organisation
and universities in the US compiled HAZ and WAZ data from national surveys and
other sources, and used statistical methods to estimate average Z scores and the
prevalence of undernutrition (defined as insufficient food intake and absorption)
for entire countries. The results show that: The proportion of children classed
as moderately to severely underweight fell from 30.1 percent to 19.4 percent between
1985 and 2011 in the countries studied. The prevalence of moderate to severe stunting
(insufficient growth in height for their age) declined from 47.2 percent to 29.9
percent. South Asia, the region with the worst nutritional status in 1985, has
improved considerably, but undernutrition is still a major issue. About one half
of the world’s underweight children live in South Asia, mostly in India. Undernutrition
worsened in sub-Saharan Africa from 1985 until the late 1990s, when height and
weight scores began to improve. The deterioration may have been due to economic
shocks, structural adjustment, and trade policy reforms in the region in the 1980s
and 1990s. In Ivory Coast and Niger, nutritional status was measurably worse
in 2011 than it had been in 1985. Height and weight scores improved in all other
regions, with the largest improvements in South Asia, East and Southeast Asia,
and Southern and Tropical Latin America. The biggest improvement in children’s
height occurred in China and Vietnam. Some countries in Latin America, such as
Chile, now have almost no undernutrition. The proportion of underweight children
almost halved per decade in Brazil. As of 2011, about half of children in Burundi, Yemen,
Timor-Leste, Niger and Afghanistan are moderately or severely stunted.
More than one-third of children in Timor-Leste, Bangladesh, Niger, India and
Nepal are moderately or severely underweight. This new study includes estimates
of all levels of malnutrition, unlike previous analyses, which excluded children
who were mildly malnourished. The statistics suggest that in most countries, the
improvements are due to population-wide improvements in nutrition, rather than
interventions targeting high-risk children. “Our analysis shows that the developing
world as a whole has made considerable progress towards reducing child malnutrition,
but there are still far too many children who don’t receive sufficient nutritious
foods or who lose nutrients due to repeated sickness. Severe challenges lie ahead,”
said Professor Majid Ezzati. “There is evidence that child nutrition is best improved
through equitable economic growth, investment in policies that help smallholder
farmers and increase agricultural productivity, and primary care and food programmes
targeted at the poor. We mustn’t allow the global economic crisis and rising food
prices to cause inequalities to increase, or cut back on investments in nutrition
and healthcare,” he added. The study was published in the Lancet.
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