Quality of food, not just quantity important for Africa
This is the warning from officials from the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) Africa Region this week, speaking to a media gathering in Nairobi.
“The burden of under-nutrition still persists across the African region, and today its impacts are being felt alongside overweight, obesity and diet-related noncommunicable diseases in many poor households,” said Dr Felicitas Zawaira, Director of Family and Reproductive Health at the regional office.
“In recent years, we’ve rightly focused many of our energies on addressing hunger, but what we must recognise is that ending hunger does not guarantee improved nutrition,” she added. “Improving nutrition sustainably requires consideration of how to produce, deliver and ensure access to healthy diets and essential nutrients, not just greater quantities of food.”
Nutritional status
For this reason, the WHO Africa Region has recommended that a person’s nutritional status should also be recognised “as a necessary building block towards achieving Universal Health Coverage (UHC) and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030”.
In 2016, an estimated 59 million children in Africa were stunted. At the same time, 10 million African children were overweight, almost double the number as in 2000. Meanwhile, five percent of African adult men and 15 percent of women were obese, while eight percent of adults above 25 years of age had diabetes and almost half of all adults (46 percent) had hypertension, according to a 2014 report.
“Not only do current figures mean we are unlikely to achieve the six global nutrition targets for 2025 but also the more ambitious target of ending all forms of malnutrition by 2030, which is integral to the goal of ensuring healthy lives and promoting wellbeing for all, at all ages,” said Dr Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Regional Director for Africa.
“An exclusive focus of our energies – and finances – on curative services and related medical equipment, supplies and medicines to treat diseases that often are rooted in malnutrition will limit our chances of achieving health and wellbeing for all,” she added.
Highly processed foods
“Obesity and diet-related non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are largely the result of lifestyles characterised by limited physical activity and the consumption of unhealthy diets consisting of highly processed foods that are rich in calories, sugars, fats, salt and additives, but low in essential nutrients,” said the WHO.
“When micronutrient deficiencies are taken into account, Africa is in fact experiencing a triple burden of malnutrition,” said Abdulaziz Adish from, Nutrition International.
“Micronutrient deficiencies, which often pass unnoticed, are responsible for reduced bodily resilience and resistance to infections. They compromise early child development, negatively affect reproductive health and reduce work rate capacity,” he added.
Sibongile Nkosi, executive director of the Healthy Living Alliance (Heala) in South Africa, said her organisation supports the WHO’s view.
“Tackling under-nutrition, obesity and non-communicable diseases requires a multi-sectoral approach,” said Nkosi. “Heala has launched a school-based campaign aimed at getting junk food and beverages banned from schools, campaign for school feeding schemes to serve healthy food and lobby government for tighter restrictions on marketing of junk food to children.”
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Quality of food, not just quantity important for Africa
by kerrycullinan, Health-e News
April 18, 2018