The year 2013: Nutrition at the top of the global agenda
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Public Health Nutrition
Abstract
Nutrition has come a long way! Looking at the turn of
events, no doubt the year 2013 will indeed be remembered
as the Year of Nutrition. Going down memory lane,
in 1933 nutrition hit the headlines of a major journal,
The Lancet, as kwashiorkor, which was described in a
small African country called Gold Coast, present-day
Ghana(1). At the time the disease was thought to be
associated with food, and in following years the provision
of food and food aid became a major thrust of development
agencies and governments, in an attempt to address
malnutrition. With time, the situation began to unfold as
we understood the complexities of the problem. Today
we see nutrition with many faces: undernutrition, overnutrition,
hidden hunger, open hunger, etc. Critically,
during the formative years, in particular the first 1000 days
(spanning conception to 24 months after birth), undernutrition
can result in deep-rooted, irreversible damage
to health, development, productivity and quality of life.
Undernutrition affects a child’s cognitive development
and subsequently school performance. Undernutrition
impairs human development and undermines national
economic growth and development. Despite the harmful
effects of undernutrition, it was marginalized. For decades,
funding for nutrition was poor as it competed
unsuccessfully with programmes on HIV/AIDS, malaria
and other infectious disease. The fortunes of nutrition
began to change with the advent of the Millennium
Development Goals (MDG). It did not take long to realize
that undernutrition was the most important constraint
to achieving the MDG(2), and indeed the mid-term evaluation
of the MDG clearly showed that countries and
regions with a high burden of undernutrition were much
less likely to meet the MDG timeline of 2015.
In 2008, nutrition hit the headlines again. The Lancet
Nutrition series of 2008 clearly presented the pathetic
state of nutrition: fragmented and nobody’s business(3).
The series of Lancet papers whipped global leaders
into action. The Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) Movement
took up the challenge of coordinating efforts at the
global level to support countries with high undernutrition
burden to pay attention to this problem, and today
thirty-five countries in this category have committed to
address undernutrition. The last three years have seen
some major shifts on the nutrition scene, especially at
the global level. Many international organizations and
governments have included nutrition strategies in their
development plans.