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Micro-nutrient Deficiencies:

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Monitoring of household coverage, with attention to population groups the most at risk ... Assessment of iodine status (UIE) every 3-4 years. 18. Government agencies ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Micro-nutrient Deficiencies:


1
Micro-nutrient Deficiencies New Challenges for
Central Asia Nune Mangasaryan, UNICEF CARK,
Workshop on Policies on Food
Fortification, and Monitoring and
Evaluation, 7-9
April 2003, Bishkek, Kyrgyz Republic
2
Current Estimates of Iodine Deficiency in CIS
3
DHS 1995 59 women 81 children
DHS Experience
DHS 1997 50 women 73 children
DHS 1999 36 women 36 children
Tadjikistan Women - gt 60 Children - 69 U3)
(MOH)
DHS 2000 47 women 36 children
DHS 1996 72 women 81 children
4
Vit. A deficiency in CARK
5
(No Transcript)
6
Causes of Death Among Pre-School Children in
Non-Industrialised Countries, 2000
Malnutrition 60
Ref.WHO 2002
7
Causes of Death Among Pre-School Children in
Non-Industrialised Countries, 2000
Malnutrition 60
Vitamin A Deficiency Increases risk of mortality
with 23
Ref.WHO 2002
8
Strategies to review
9
CARK Anemia Prevention and Control Programme
Strategy
Education for dietary change
Flour fortification
Weekly supplementation 6-24 months Adolescents
and childbearing age women Pregnant women
Research agenda of key studies and monitoring
activities
IMCI
Nut. Act. Plan
BF
Reprod. Health.
10
Strategic planning APC
  • There are serious levels of anaemia in all the
    CARK countries.
  • These high prevalences will cause developmental
    problems in children most affected,
    pregnancy-related outcome problems in women, etc
  • The experience gained starting 1990s in APC and
    certain achievements and accomplishments (in all
    strategic directions) provide a good basis for
    further expansion and scaling up with significant
    outcome within 3-4 years.

11
Fortification Flour fortification
  • This is a real opportunity and should be
    aggressively pursued over the next few years.
  • The experience of fortification started recently
    and lessons learned provide a good basis for
    further expansion and scaling up with significant
    outcome within 3-4 years. All efforts have to be
    applied to call for government, partners, donors
    attention to support the initiative.
  • Like all the approaches this will not be the
    total answer, but will help elevate the national
    average intakes of iron (and other
    micronutrients) and allow resources and attention
    to be given in a more targeted way to those still
    deficient.

12
Main interventions for wheat flour fortification
  • Enforce National Legislation and regulations on
    flour fortification (including prohibition of
    export of non fortified flour)
  • To enforce communication strategy
  • Develop monitoring system of iron fortification
    in grain mills. Further support of monitoring
    system

13
Main interventions for wheat flour fortification
  • Initiate mass production of fortified flour at
    all large mills in countries, thus ensuring
    access to fortified flour for at least 90 of
    women and children
  • Procurement of equipment and consumables to
    maintain sustainability of fortification process
    at the pilot mills and to extend experience to
    the large mills
  • Technical consultancy and support, including
    experience exchange from the Countries reaching
    flour fortification during the first stages of
    real implementation of flour fortification.

14
Supplementation
  • Continue Iron supplementation with review of
    target group, strengthening of all interventions
    proposed at desk review until fortification is
    taken to the scale
  • Improve management and organisation, supply
    distribution, build capacities, IEC with strong
    monitoring component at all levels
  • Review preventive supplementation and treatment
    guidelines

15
Conditions Required for an Effective Salt
Iodization Programme
  • To reach USI within a year or two and be
    sustainable
  • Commitment of the Government and salt industry
  • Need of partnership
  • Legislation
  • Working enforcement mechanisms
  • Reliable surveillance system for monitoring
    quality control and quality Assurance
  • To have a large population coverage, including
    the population groups the most at risk
  • Monitoring of household coverage
  • Strengthen Communication component
  • To correct iodine deficiency by ensuring adequate
    iodine intake
  • Assessment of iodine status (UIE) every 3-4 years

16
Steps to reach USI in CARK
  • To ensure USI
  • Support to salt producer capacities for salt
    iodisation, marketing, testing, involvement in
    policy and decision making process
  • Three-level surveillance system
  • Reliable surveillance system for monitoring
    quality control and quality Assurance
  • Market monitoring
  • Monitoring of household coverage, with attention
    to population groups the most at risk

17
Steps to reach USI in CARK
  • To be sustainable
  • Commitment of the Government and salt industry
  • Need of partnership
  • Legislation - to adopt and introduce mechanisms
    for effective enforcement
  • Consumer education
  • To correct iodine deficiency by ensuring adequate
    iodine intake
  • Assessment of iodine status (UIE) every 3-4 years

18
Solutions through Partnerships in the country
  • Government agencies
  • Associations of producers
  • NGOs
  • Consumer organisations
  • Media
  • International organisations
  • Scientific groups

19
Communications
  • National communication plans to review, enrich,
    and operationalise
  • Ownership and commitment of government advocacy
    has to be reached through advocacy efforts
    politicians, media.
  • More tools for decision makers
    cost-effectiveness and other economic
    implications

20
The economic costs of undernutrition are high
productivity losses
21
Relative Cost Effectiveness of Micronutrient
Interventions
Source UNICEF/UNU/WHO/MI, 1999
22
Iron deficiency costs around 0.9 of the GDP
Over US350 millions to the CARK countries
Kazakhstan 142.2 million Kyrgyzstan 11.7
million Uzbekistan 159.3 million
Turkmenistan 28.8 million Tajikistan 17
million.
23
Monitoring and evaluation
1. Production Quality assurance and quality
control 2. Market 3. Households and schools 4.
Import customs
24
Strategic planning
  • Government high-level Leadership to play a role
    of coordination between different agencies
    MOH/SES, MoEd, Industry, Agriculture, NGOs
  • National plans need further development and
    enrichment to include recommendations for USI,
    UFF, and successful elimination of VAD
  • The government support, ownership, and investment
    for the process

25
Measures to Correct Vitamin A Deficiency
Supplementation
Dietary Diversification
Food Fortification
Public Health Measures
All approaches are complementary and should not
be used in isolation
26
Supplementation prevention
  • Advantages
  • Easy to implement
  • Fast improvement of vitamin A status
  • Easy to target vulnerable populations
  • Low-cost (2 cents per capsule)
  • Easy to do - minimal training and equipment
    required
  • Constraints
  • Short term approach
  • Distribution every 6 months
  • Requires heavy logistics

27
Food Fortification
  • Globally a growing interest for food
    fortification
  • Has turned out to be more feasible than expected
    in non industrialised countries (eg mass
    fortification in Central America, Morocco,
    Zambia)

28
Food Fortification
  • Advantages
  • Wide coverage
  • Easy to implement
  • No active participation of population
  • Cheap
  • Constraints
  • Entire population is exposed
  • The target groups - pre school age children and
    pregnant women - may not be reached
  • Requires centralised food industry
  • Requires effective surveillance system (quality
    control, biological impact)

29
Dietary Diversification
  • Advantages
  • Long term approach to control VAD
  • Relies on
  • Availability of vitamin A rich food (fruits,
    vegetables and animal products)
  • Constraints
  • Small scale projects
  • Limited population coverage

30
Complementary Public Health Measures
  • Integrated management to control infections
    diseases (IMCI)
  • Immunisation (EPI)
  • Safe motherhood interventions
  • Improve malnutrition and other micronutrient
    deficiencies
  • Iron deficiency
  • Iodine Deficiency
  • Promotion of breast feeding
  • Improve water and sanitation
  • Poverty alleviation programmes
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