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Food Fortification in Public Health Policy

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UK and colonies same during WWII. Preventing Goiter and Iodine Deficiency Disorders ... Common in prisons, mental institutions, sharecroppers in southern US ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Food Fortification in Public Health Policy


1
Food Fortification in Public Health Policy
  • TH Tulchinsky MD MPH
  • Braun SPH
  • 11 Nov 2003

2
Essential Considerations
  • Public health and medical responsibility
  • Food industry and regulators involved
  • Create demand - enriched foods, behavior changes
  • Monitor compliance and ID rates
  • National council on nutrition - academic and
    professional organizations and public reps
  • Long term program
  • Regulatory, monitoring and laboratory support

3
Public Health Nutrition Strategies
  • Food based strategy
  • Socio economic factors
  • Food supply/costs
  • Education
  • Supplementation for target groups
  • Women and children
  • Elderly
  • Fortification of basic foods
  • Surveillance and monitoring

4
18-19th Century Breakthroughs
  • Lind and scurvy 1747
  • Lemon juice in Royal Navy, 1796
  • Davy isolates sodium, potassium, calcium,
    magnesium, sulphur, boron, 1807
  • Chatin shows iodine prevents goiter, 1850
  • Takaki and beriberi, Japanese Navy, 1885
  • Eijkman publishes cause of beriberi, 1897

5
Low Cost Solutions to Eliminate Micronutrient
Malnutrition
4
3
Annual Per Capita Cost of Interventions
2
US Dollars
1
0
Iron
Iron Fort
.
Iodine
Iodine
Vit A
Vit A
Suppl
.
Suppl
.
Fort
.
Suppl
.
Fort
.
Source World Bank, 1994
6
Relative Cost Effectiveness of Micronutrient
Interventions
Productivity Gained per US Expended

146
.
0

150

125

100

84
.
1

75

47
.
5

50

28
.
0

24
.
7

13
.
8

25

0
Fe Suppl
.
Fe Suppl
.
Iodine
Vit
.
A
Fe Fort
.
Vit
.
A
(
Wom
.)
(
Preg
.
Fort
.
Fort
.
Suppl
.
Wom
.)
Source UNICEF/UNU/WHO/MI, 1999
7
Vital Amines
  • 1900, nutrition - calories, fats, carbohydrates
    proteins
  • 1912, Funk defines vital amines
  • Rickets, scurvy, goiter, beriberi common in
    industrial countries
  • Pellagra epidemic in southern US
  • 1914, Goldberger of USPHS investigates pellagra
  • 1922, McCollum and vitamin D in cod liver oil

8
More on Vitamins
  • 1931, Fluoride shown to prevent tooth decay
  • 1932, Vitamin C and riboflavin isolated
  • 1933, Williams - kwashiorkor as vitamin
    deficiency
  • 1941, Prenatal diet and health of newborn
  • 1945, Fluoridation of water Grand Rapids
  • 1948, Vitamin B12 isolated
  • 1949, Framingham study begins

9
Key Landmarks
  • Mortons iodized salt, 1924
  • Louisiana - mandates vit B fortification of
    flour, 1928
  • US federal mandate - enrichment of flour with
    vitamins B and iron, 1941
  • UK and colonies same during WWII

10
Preventing Goiter and Iodine Deficiency Disorders
  • 1917, high US draftees rejected - goiter
  • 1922-27, goiter rates fall from 39 to 9 by
    statewide prevention programs
  • 1924, Mortons Iodized Salt (N America)
  • 1979, Iodization mandatory in Canada
  • 1980s, WHO - universal iodization of salt
  • Many countries achieved iodization

11
Iodine Fortification of Salt in the U.S.
Trend in Goiter Prevalence in Michigan
WHO Monograph Series N. 44
12
Pellagra The 4 Ds
  • Diarrhea, dermatitis, dementia, death
  • Thought to be of infectious origin
  • Common in prisons, mental institutions,
    sharecroppers in southern US
  • Curable by dietary change (Goldberger)
  • 1929, niacin found as essential factor
  • 1906-1940, 3 million cases and 100,000 deaths
    attributed to pellagra

13
Figure 2                                       
                                            
14
Rickets
  • 1921, rickets affects 75 of children in New York
    City schools
  • Cod liver oil commonly used (middle class)
  • 1940s, US fortifies milk with vitamin D
    dramatically reduces rickets incidence
  • Canada fortifies milk 1940s, then refortifies
    resulting in increase in rickets in 1960s

15
Global Burden of Micronutrient Deficiencies
  • Iron deficiency - all ages
  • Chronic undernutrition all ages
  • Iodine deficiency pregnancy
  • Vitamin A deficiency young children
  • PEM young children
  • Folic acid deficiency all ages
  • 2 billion
  • 1 billion
  • 200 million
  • 200 million
  • 167 million
  • Unknown
  • Source WHO

16
Iron Deficiency
  • Commonest MND
  • Affects survival, health and productivity
  • Affects women in age of fertility
  • Affects pregnancy and newborn
  • Affects growth and cognitive development of
    infants and children
  • Interaction with vitamin C deficiency

17
Global Burden of Iron Deficiency
  • Source WHO

18
Benefits of PreventingIron Deficiency
  • Benefits to children
  • Improved behavioral and cognitive development
  • Improved child survival (where severe anemia is
    common)
  • Benefits to adolescents
  • Improved cognitive performance
  • Better iron stores for later pregnancies (females)

19
  • Benefits to Pregnant Women and Their Infants
  • Decreased low birth weight and perinatal
    mortality
  • Decreased maternal mortality and obstetrical
    complications (where severe anemia is common)
  • Benefits to all Individuals
  • Improved fitness and work capacity
  • Improved cognition
  • Increased immunity
  • Lower morbidity from infectious disease

20
Trends in Prevalence of Anemia in Low-income
U.S. Children, 12-17 Months Old
Hgb lt10.3 g/dL Yip et al., JAMA, 1987
21
  • Preschool children
  • School age children
  • and adolescents
  • Non-pregnant women
  • Pregnant women
  • Adult men

22
Prevalence of iron deficiency by income and
race/ethnicity, U.S., 1-4 year olds, 1988-94
Based on serum ferritin model NHANES III (Ogden
et al., 1998)
23
US Federal Policy
  • USDA extension programs
  • 1921-29, US Maternal and Infancy Act - state
    health departments employ nutritionists
  • 1930s, relief/commodity distribution
  • 1941, enriched wheat flour with iron, vit B
  • 1941, US establishes RDAs
  • Food stamps, WIC, school lunch programs
  • National nutrition surveys

24
Canada 1979
  • National nutrition survey 1971
  • Geographic, social and ethnic deficiencies
  • Process of consultation
  • 1979 federal regulations, mandatory
  • Vitamin A and D in all milk products
  • Iodine in salt
  • Vitamins B and iron in flour

25
Epidemiologic Revolution 1960s-1980s
  • Risk factors for chronic disease
  • Health field concept
  • Health for All
  • Declining mortality from stroke and CHD, trauma
  • Advances in drugs and diagnostics
  • Control of infectious diseases
  • Rapid increase in costs of care health system
    reform

26
Nutrition Interactions
  • Iodine Deficiency psychomotor retardation
  • Iron Def Anemia and infectious diseases
  • Iron promotes growth and development
  • Vitamin A and infectious diseases e.g. measles
  • Vitamin A promotes growth
  • Folic acid prevents birth defects
  • Folic acid with CVD, Alzheimers Disease
  • Nutrition and cancer
  • Nutrition and cardiovascular disease
  • Nutrition and diabetes
  • Nutrition in disease management

27
Folic Acid and NTDs
  • Pre pregnancy folic acid supplements prevent
    neural tube defects, 1980s
  • Supplements to women in age of fertility achieves
    lt1/3 coverage, 1990s (US)
  • FDA mandates fortification of enriched flour,
    from 1998
  • Canada and UK also mandate folic acid
    fortification of flour
  • New paradigm in public health

28
Table Return to top. Figure
29
Figure
30
(No Transcript)
31
Folic Acid and Heart Disease
  • High homocysteine levels associated with excess
    CHD, birth defects, Alzheimers Disease
  • Folic acid reduces high homocysteine
  • Flour fortification effective in raising FA
    levels in population
  • Clinical trials of folic acid and CHD underway
  • New paradigm in public health nutrition

32
Osteoporosis
  • Aging of the population
  • Vit D production in skin seasonal
  • Sun varies by season and latitude even in sunny
    countries
  • Fortification of calcium popularized
  • Vitamin D lacking in raw milk
  • Calcium, vitamin D, fluoride co-factors
  • Fortifying milk products with Vit D needed

33
Problems with Fortification Policy
  • Antagonism to trends in North America
  • European resistance e.g. EU
  • Nutritionist focus on clinical approach
  • WHO ambivalence/opposition
  • Green attitudes
  • Medical attitudes and lack of interest
  • Resistance to mandatory medication
  • Individual choice
  • Clinical vs. population approaches
  • Manufacturers and regulatory agency attitudes

34
Progress
  • Decreased contamination and food-borne disease
  • Improved food handling methods - refrigeration
  • Improved nutritional value of foods and crops
  • Food fortification
  • Identifying essential micronutrients
  • Food-fortification programs eliminated rickets,
    goiter, pellagra in the US, Canada
  • Folic acid and other new disease relationships
  • Micronutrients as functional food elements
  • Genetically engineered foods

35
Conclusion
  • Nutrition a major public health issue
  • Affects MCH, infectious, non infectious disease
  • High priority birth defects, IDA, IDD, CHD
  • Fortification has low sex appeal vs. clinical
  • Mandatory vs. voluntary false dilemma
  • Requires concern, knowledge, advocacy and
    leadership
  • Public health role

36
Referents
  • World Health Organization
  • UNICEF
  • CDC
  • American Academy of Pediatrics
  • American College Obstetrics and Gynecology
  • Food and Drug Administration
  • Health Canada
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