Title: Nutrition%20in%20Global%20Health
1Nutrition in Global Health
Part 1 Roadmap to the worlds nutritional
health Causes, mechanisms, solutions
Allan J Davison PhD, Professor,
Biochemist, Faculty of Sciences, Simon Fraser
University Department of Biomedical Sciences
Kinesiology January 2011
Prepared as part of an education project of the
Global Health Education Consortium
collaborating partners
2Nutrition in global health - Overview
- Inequities in food distribution ? global hunger
starvation - One billion are too hungry to live productive
lives - an equal number are adversely affected
by overweight! - 6 major deficiencies impact health through the
life cycle water, protein, iron, vitamin A,
iodine, folic acid - Childbearing women their children are hardest
hit - Meanwhile, overnutrition inactivity? risk of
heart disease, osteoporosis, cancer, diabetes,
strokes, etc.
Page 2
3Fundamentals and emphasis
- As we consider cause and effect we must ask
How why have such inequities come to be? Who
and what factors impede solutions? What
current initiatives will bring the resolution? - To help answer these, we must will
emphasize Immediate causes - scarcity of
specific nutrients Primary and secondary
prevention Public health approaches to solutions
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Page 3
4Other GHEC modules contribute to our
understanding of Nutrition in Global Health
- This module 41a does not stand alone. 41b
Roadmap to a world without hunger will follow
(see note) - Two other GHEC modules deal with poverty hunger
- Module 48 Acute malnutrition Clinical aspects
(deals with treatment) - Why is the 3rd world the 3rd world? (causes of
poverty hunger) http//globalhealthedu.org/res
ources/Pages/default.aspx
To see this module in the context of what will
follow, see Note A
5Pre-quiz
- As a reality check, and to create teachable
moments for what follows, we now invite you to
take a 5-minute pre-quiz - You will be offered 10 true-or-false questions to
dispel some common misconceptions - Some of this misinformation is spread by those
who have something to gain from it - After completing the pre-quiz, we hope you will
continue this module with greater interest and
renewed clarity - LINK TO THE PRE-QUIZ HERE
Page 5
6Learning objectives
After completing this module you should be
able to
- Describe the extent of malnutrition its impact
on people of the planet, understand how MDGs
depend on nutrition - Analyze the factors that determine nutritional
health - Identify nutritional problems among individuals
populations, identify causes, appropriate
solutions - Assess risks at various stages of the life cycle
recommend strategies for diminishing risk - Compare competing theories accounting for the
inequities - Predict outcomes by projecting current trends
into the future - foresee a pathway toward a world without
hunger -
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7To get the most out of this module
- a nutritionist or student of nutrition
- a student of one of the health professions
- planning a project in regions with severe
nutritional problems - a public health practitioner
- Pay attention to global public health policy
implications. - Pay attention to perspectives realities in
desperate situations - Emphasize check-lists to prepare for field work
gather information to recommend advocate for
intervention. - Use slides resources in your information /
teaching sessions
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8Preface Nutrition is crucial to global health
- Among the immediately modifiable factors that
affect individual public health nutrition is
of prime importance - Nutrition at every stage of life lays a
foundation for health in the ensuing stage - For all nations, rich poor, nutrition
determines physical health development through
the life-cycle, including - Success in childbearing, cognitive function,
socio-economic independence, education, disease
resistance employability - Health economic development are contingent on
provision of adequate food, nutritional resources
support
9A vicious cycle economics, hunger, health
Poverty ? diminished access to agricultural
food resources ? malnutrition
Physical cognitive impairment, susceptibility
to disease, early death ? inability to earn an
income
nutrition
Economic marginalization ? inability to provide
for self or family
10The Millennium Development Goals
- At a UN Millennium (2002) summit, the nations of
the world set eight MDGs to be achieved by 2015 - The world's main development challenges were
identified - Specific actions and targets (the MDGs)
- A commitment to provide the means was made by
189 nations signed by 147 heads of state - The MDGs break down into
- 21 quantifiable targets
- Targets are measured by 60 time-lined indicators
Some nations have kept their trust. But some of
the richest in the world have announced that
they will not meet their commitments
11Nutrition Millennium Development Goals
Primary goal is to eradicate extreme poverty
hunger
see next 2 slides
Nutrition is a direct prerequisite to goals 1,
3, 4, 5 6 indirectly to 7 8
12Centrality of nutrition to MDGs 1, 2, 3
1. Eradicate extreme poverty hunger. Poverty
is the main determinant of hunger. In turn,
malnutrition irreversibly compromises physical
cognitive development thus transmits poverty
hunger to future generations. 2. Achieve
universal primary education. Malnutrition
diminishes the chance that a child will go to
school, stay in school, or perform well in
school 3. Promote gender equality, empower
women. Womens malnutrition impairs the whole
familys health nutrition
13Centrality of nutrition to MDGs 4, 5, 6
- 4. Reduce child mortality. Delivery of a live
healthy child is dependent, above all, on a well
nourished mother. Protein folic acid are
critical here - 5. Improve maternal health. Malnutrition
accentuates all major risk factors for maternal
mortality, e.g., inadequate protein, iron,
iodine, vitamin A calcium - 6. Combat serious infectious diseases.
Malnutrition aggravates infections, ?immune
competence, ?transmission mortality in HIV,
malaria, tuberculosis - Adapted from Gillespie and Haddad (2003)
http//web.worldbank.org/
14Slow progress toward the MDGs
At mid-way, most MDGs are partly met. Only
goal 2 is fully within reach!
15Nutrition in Global HealthCourse overview
- Overview of nutrition across humankind
- Nutrition fundamentals in global context
- Top six nutrition problems, their solutions
- Nutrition across the life cycle in rich poor
nations - Cause effect in population nutrition
- Overview and where we are now
- Bridge to Part 2 Roadmap to a world without hunger
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16Universal limitations health consequences
- We cant survive without about 15 essential
mineral elements, so they are needed in our
diets, most in trace amounts - We cant manufacture about 15 vitamins, so they
must be provided in our diets - And in addition
17Universal limitations health consequences
- In addition We lost key metabolic abilities our
evolutionary ancestors had. Thus we are
vulnerable to 2 dietary risks - In early life a period of rapid growth, we are
vulnerable to kwashiorkor (protein
insufficiency) because we cant synthesize 8
essential amino acids missing from our diet -
- 2) In later life we are vulnerable to obesity
diabetes in part because we can make fat from
carbohydrate, but we cant easily convert stored
fats back to carbohydrates
Note B
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18Categories of nutritional status
- Nutritional status is assessed as one of four
categories - Good nutritional status All nutrients (right
quantities, time place) allow optimal, growth,
maintenance, reproduction - Overnutrition An excess of a nutrients (usually
calories) is being consumed, so that health is
negatively impacted - Undernutrition Insufficient food is consumed to
allow for the energy needs of the individual.
Inevitably dietary ( then body) protein is
burned for energy. A secondary protein deficiency
ensues thus "protein-energy-malnutrition" - Malnutrition Energy consumption is adequate, but
there is an imbalance among constituents of the
diet and health is impacted
Note C
19Worldwide distribution of malnutrition
- Over 20 million children suffer from acute
malnutrition WHO.
Scientific American, Sept 2007
20Worldwide, nutritional inequities follow
poverty(as do health inequities life
expectancy)
- Globally, there is plenty of food for everyone
but those who have more than they need find
reasons not to share - The result in the time you spend on this module
over 1000 children will have died of hunger - Each day 1500 children go forever blind from lack
of vitamin A - The poorest are 50-200x more likely to die in
pregnancy (more than half these deaths are
attributable to iron deficiency). - About 2 billion people (56 of pregnant women)
have iron deficiency. Their babies have low
birth-weight, ? mortality
Note D
21The bottom billion (title of a book by Paul
Collier )
- The poorest of the poor, Public health
nutritionists identify a subclass of the hungry -
those who try to survive on resources worth less
than 1 per day - We define this subclass as people who don't get
enough to meet the ordinary demands of life - They lack the resources to earn a living, or
obtain whats needed for normal, growth,
maintenance reproduction - It goes without saying that they are unable to
provide the necessities for those who depend on
them
22The bottom billion (title of a book by Paul
Collier )
- Their lack of access to resources is such that a
significant fraction will be unable to stay alive - They live mostly in isolated rural areas and most
are subsistence farmers - This means that what they eat this month is
what they can take out of the ground from last
month's planting
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23Unhelpful misconceptions about aid
False Most aid money goes into the Swiss bank
accounts of corrupt African dictators Aid
creates dependence impedes self-sufficiency De
spite all the aid , the problems are only
getting worse The truth is Overwhelmingly
African leaders are not corrupt. When they are,
most bribes come from the West Well planned aid
builds capacity self-sufficiency Overall,
hunger worldwide is diminishing. MDGs go forward
because of the countries that honour their
pledges!
Note E
24Money? Useless - no nearby shops
- Its hard to imagine a malnourished community and
you may want to experience field conditions in
advanceNo commerce! Try it at a Medecins sans
Frontieres site http//www.starvedforattent
ion.org/ - No shops to spend money in, no one to employ
anyone, no one to sell things to - Hungry children are all too visible, and those
who didnt survive are in tiny unmarked graves - Their needs are much more immediate than money
- We dont need studies to learn what they need -
read on!
25If they dont need money what do they need?
- Short term they likely need emergency rations,
safe waterIn conflict zones, shelter safety to
live, plant, harvest - Medium term they need to become self-sufficient,
withgood seeds, fertilizer, usable water,
sanitation, low technology agricultural info
resources, health services, mosquito nets,
pharmaceuticals - Long term they need the prerequisites of
sustainable economic development - tools for
development see Part 2 - Kids need particular attention see note below
later slides
Note F
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26The goal is to see everyone self-sufficient
- People in the poverty trap live from hand to
mouth, with no opportunity to put resources aside
to build a better future - Such communities cannot access the ladder of
economic development without external help. - The MDG promises of 0.7 of rich country GDP for
aid was chosen to eliminate extreme poverty
hunger in 3 decades - But there are some nations whose promises mean
little. Long before 2008, US Canada changed
their minds - Thanks to the nations that keep their promises,
widespread hunger will be eliminated, but only
after 30-50 years
This is not, however, cause for undiluted joy.
See Note G
27Some communities subsist in the poverty trap
- Even among the richest there are some individuals
so marginalized that there seems little hope for
them The larger culture, if it is compassionate,
takes long-term responsibility for ensuring them
the necessities of life - Globally there are communities that have been
denied the resources to ever become wealthy.
Often from geography, climate, invasion, or
appropriation of their natural resources - Regardless, a world community of compassion can
provide the necessities of life, offer new life
to the dispossessed, as North America once opened
its doors to the poor
Note H
28Nutrition in Global HealthCauses, mechanisms,
solutions Nutrition is crucial to global health
MDGs
- Overview of nutrition across humankind
- Human nutrition fundamentals in global context
- Top Six nutrition problems, their solutions
- Nutrition across the life cycle in rich poor
nations - Cause effect in population nutrition
- Overview and where we are now
- Bridge to Part 2 Roadmap to a world without hunger
Page 28
29Human Nutrition Fundamentals in Global Context
The next set of slides covers the critical skill
set needed for understanding nutritional issues
in the context of global health They are not a
substitute for nutritional training, but rather a
catalog of nutritional tools applicable to
problems a health practitioner might encounter in
the field From this you can learn when to call in
a nutritional expert, what kind, what to you
might reasonably ask for receive If you have
learned nutrition in a developed country, this
may help you to expand your knowledge of
nutrition and public health in the context of 3rd
world health problems
30Dietary patterns across cultures
- 1. Hunter gatherers the earliest category
- Benefits mixed diet, well nourished in good
times - Risks famine or drought, warfare plunder,
resource- depletion through population
pressure - Prevalent problems starvation, thirst, ?
life-expectancy
Note I
31Dietary patterns across cultures
- 2. Peasant agriculturalists successful small
scale farmers (currently the largest group) - Benefits close to food sources if no punitive
taxes or rentsusually well adapted to their
traditional diets - Risks single crop emphasis ? malnutrition,
plagues (locusts, rodents), exploitation, warfare
and plunder - Prevalent problems vitamin deficiency,
starvation, alcoholism
Page 31
32Dietary patterns across cultures
- 3. Indigent, landless crop planters
- Benefits Community, share with family,
neighbors, income is typically less than a dollar
a day - Risks Crop failure, drought or famine, erosion,
soil-exhaustion, pestilence, economic
exploitation (by landlords, seed providers,
loan-sharks), displacement, forced migration,
civil unrest or foreign invasion - Problems multiple vitamin deficiencies,
kwashiorkor (protein malnutrition), infectious
disease epidemics. Too poor, powerless to help
themselves, most of them will never escape their
circumstances, nor achieve full health
33Dietary patterns across cultures
- 4. Urban slum dwellers fastest growing group
- Benefits hope for jobs, escape from drought or
crop failure - Risks overcrowding, poverty, poor hygiene,
limited food choice, social disruption ? loss of
traditional diets, crime - Prevalent problems deficiencies of essential
nutrients, alcoholism, obesity, kwashiorkor,
epidemics
34Dietary patterns across cultures
- 5. Affluent urbanites most recent category
- Benefits many food choices (appropriate and
inappropriate) - Risks inactivity along with high fat, sugar,
alcohol intakes - Prevalent problems overnutrition, obese babies
and adultsdiabetes (carbohydrates), cholesterol,
atheroma (lipid), strokes, heart disease
diabetes, gout (uric acid - meat sources)
Note J
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35Nutrition in Global HealthCauses, mechanisms,
solutions Nutrition is crucial to global health
MDGs
- Overview of nutrition across humankind
- Human nutrition fundamentals in global context
- Top six nutrition problems, their solutions
- Nutrition across the life cycle in rich poor
nations - Cause effect in population nutrition
- Overview and where we are now
- Bridge to Part 2 Roadmap to a world without
hunger -
Page 35
36Top 6 global manifestations of malnutrition
We begin with a perspective, then we take each of
the 6 in turn
- Water is a food (food is the material we eat
drink)In hot climates, we can die in a few
hours from a lack of it - 2) Protein-energy malnutrition
- The machinery of life, sculpted from 20 different
amino acids - Deficiency is most serious in children (time of
fastest growth) ? "failure to thrive", stunted
growth
The material in this section is well reviewed
at http//www.pitt.edu/super1/lecture/lec0141/
index.htm Iron, vitamin A, iodine check the
latest information at http//www.micronutrient
.org/English/view.asp?x1
37Top 6 global manifestations of malnutrition
(cont.)
- 3) Iron deficiency - prevalent in Africa and
Asia - Women children are the most seriously affected
- In parts of Africa 60 of children have ? blood
iron - About a quarter of these have symptoms of anaemia
- 4) Vitamin A deficiency
- Over 100 million children under 5 suffer vitamin
A deficiency - In high deficiency areas vit. A tabs ? child
mortality by 23 - ? child blindness by 80. Night-blindness is
an early sign
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38Top 6 global manifestations of malnutrition
(cont.)
- 5) Dont underestimate iodine deficiency
disorders - WHO 2003 1.6 billion people dont get enough
iodine. This is the major cause of preventable
brain damage. - Thanks to MDG programmes the problem is
shrinking! http//www.who.int/vmnis/iodine/statu
s/en/index.html - In addition nutrition determines chronic disease
risk - Heart disease, osteoporosis, cancer, diabetes,
strokes, etc. - Well go through these one at a time in the
following slides
For categories of at risk people across
countries, see Note K
Page 38
39Top 6 global manifestations of malnutrition
(cont.)
- 6) Folic Acid is required for healthy babies
- A deficiency causes spina-bifida a common birth
defect - Supplements are recommended before start of
pregnancy - 50 of pregnancies are unintentional!
- Women who might become pregnant, need advice
- More details on these nutrients in the ensuing
slides
Page 39
40Water one of our most important foods
- Adequate safe water is most important dietary
component - 9 million worldwide have water-borne diseases
- In India, contaminated water kills 300,000
children annually - Problems relating to water supply safety have
simple, relatively inexpensive solutions - Water ownership is, however, contentious
usually follows military power (e.g. in Middle
East) - In hot humid conditions workers may need over 5 l
/ day also need to replace the NaCl lost along
with water in sweat
http//www.who.int/water_sanitation_health/mdg1/en
/index.html
41The special importance of proteins
- Proteins are the machinery of life. We have no
storage form. If we must use our protein
stores, our tissues lose function - Plasma, liver and kidney lose function first.
Their proteins are the most labile. Then,
digestive tract, muscle heart - Proteins are made up of 20 amino acids. 12 are
non-essential they can be made from other
dietary components - 8 amino acids are essential. If even one is
missing, no protein can be synthesized. A protein
lacking any one essential amino acid has zero
biological value
42Dietary deficiency of proteins is deadly
- When any essential amino acid is missing, all the
rest are burned no protein synthesis can occur
zero! - All essential aas must be there at the same
time. Meeting an amino acid need 1 day later is
useless - A diet previously adequate in essential amino
acids becomes inadequate if non-essential amino
acids are removed. Because, although the body can
make missing non-essential aa, it uses up
essential amino acids to do so - Protein complementarity, de-emphasized in
nutrition courses, can be vital where protein
intake is compromised
43Humans adapt to low protein intakes ...
- ... otherwise impact of protein deficiency would
be even higher - Endocrine changes improve the recycling of
proteins. As tissues repair, the released amino
acids are reused more efficiently - In the African presentation of kwashiorkor, a
child is exposed to a protein deficient diet (age
1 to 5) adapts successfully - Then a 1-week lack of protein (parent loses job,
baby is fed glucose-water only, or a
gastro-intestinal infection) ? kwash - Child is treated for kwash, sent back to the home
to same diet, reaches adolescence, usually
without recurrence.
44Protein energy nutrition are inseparable
- When the diet lacks carbohydrates, it uses some
amino acids to make glucose for brain, muscle,
etc. - When a diet lacks total calories, proteins are
co-opted, first dietary, then plasma, liver,
kidney, etc. - For these reasons, a diet previously adequate in
essential amino acids becomes inadequate if
carbohydrate or calories are removed. - Google protein-sparing effects of carbohydrates
if you want to understand this further
Page 44
45Protein-energy malnutrition - in adults
- Tissues are raided, with the following
consequences - Loss of plasma proteins ? oedema
- Loss of liver kidney function ? diminished
inactivation excretion of carcinogens and
toxins - Loss of immune function ? gastro-intestinal
infections - Loss of digestive tract / liver function ? amino
acids cant be utilized for proteins. No
treatment can prevent death - Loss of muscle and heart tissue ? weakness, heart
failure
Oedema or edema abnormal accumulation of fluid
beneath the skin or in body cavities
46Hungry kids difficulties in diagnosis
- Marasmic babies may not seem undernourished until
a check for pitting oedema reveals that what
appear to be strong arms and legs, are in reality
oedematous - Another diagnostic complication is that most
deficiencies are combined, as in protein energy
malnutrition PEM with multiple vitamin
deficiencies - The distinctions are crucial both in determining
treatment, and in determining if the underlying
problem in the community is scarcity of food, a
protein, or many nutrients
Page 46
47Protein malnutrition is different
- In uncomplicated kwashiorkor, only protein is
lacking - Malnourished, not undernourished - The risk of death or permanently retarded
development is great, and the risk is increased
because its easier to miss the diagnosis - Kwashiorkor babies may have more than adequate
calories in their diets. They may be chubby, with
substantial subcutaneous fat - Kwashiorkor may go unnoticed even when urgent
hospitalization is needed, or when death is
imminent
48Protein malnutrition diagnosis
- When there are many sick kids in a community, but
none look undernourished be sure to look for
protein deficiency. Why? - Its important not to miss the diagnosis.
Kwashiorkor has a high fatality rate even with
hospitalization - The 1st symptom to present is often diarrhoea, or
oedema - The child may be treated for a gastrointestinal
infection while the underlying cause,
kwashiorkor, goes undiagnosed - Oedema is an early symptom, and may be mistaken
for chubby limbs, so test if nutrition may be
compromised
49Tracking protein-energy malnutrition in kids
- Failure to thrive may be an early warning of
flagrant PEM in an individual child or a
community. Always investigate the cause - Growth charts give weight for stature / length
across age. They provide criteria to estimate
severity. Proper use requires training! - Change in position on a chart shows effectiveness
of treatment probability of survival - If many children in a community show up at risk
on growth charts, authorities must be alerted to
endemic problems
Page 49
50Early measures required on PEM diagnosis
- Treatment is urgent - hospitalization is
preferred if available - Delayed physical growth is often restored in
catch-up growth when a good diet is provided - Cognitive disabilities may be irreversible if
prolonged - Ready-to use foods (RTUF) for PEM have saved many
lives - Oral rehydration salt (ORS) therapy is also
life-saving when there is accompanying diarrhoea
(which is usually the case)
Note L
51Early measures required on PEM diagnosis
- Both RTUF and ORS can be given at home in a
bottle (Wikipedia). World production of ORS is
around 500 million sachets / year. Improvisation
of ORS is described at http//rehydrate.org/ors/ma
de-at-home.htmrecipes - Powdered milk protein in boiled water can be very
helpful as an emergency measure - Acute fatality rate can be 25 even with prompt
treatment
Page 51
52Iron deficiency affects 500 million globally
http//www.micronutrient.org/English/view.asp?x57
9
- Causes insufficient availability of dietary
iron, or increased iron requirements to meet
reproductive demands, haemmorhage, parasitic
infections (often concurrently). - The result is an increasingly severe anaemia,
reduced work productivity ? poverty, diminished
learning ability, increased susceptibility to
infection - For more on consequences of iron deficiency, see
Note M
53Iron deficiency affects 500 million globally
- Iron deficiency is best diagnosed in the
preclinical stage, by measurement of transferrin
saturation - Females gt males due to iron loss at menstruation
-- 56 of pregnant women are affected 3 x as
many as in developed countries - 25 of men also are deficient in iron in the
developing world
Page 53
54Treatment of iron deficiency rebuilding iron
reserves
- Iron tablets are effective within weeks, but
non-compliance is common so compliance must be
checked - Increase iron intake through combining iron-rich
foods with agents that ? iron absorption (like
vitamin C) - Encourage availability and consumption of
iron-fortified foods
55Treatment of iron deficiency rebuilding iron
reserves
- Weekly / daily supplementation is recommended for
vulnerable groups in areas with intractable iron
deficiency - Treat causes of diminished iron reserves
haemorrhage, parasites (including malaria), and
hemolytic conditions. - Be alert! Iron may be lethal in some inherited
anaemias (thalassemias, sickle cell, or Hb M)
common in Africa Asia
Page 55
56Iron excess - dangerous to some
- Those with haemolytic anaemias (eg thalassaemia
common in people of African or Asian descent).
Iron should not be prescribed until the cause of
an anaemia is known - Where iron pots are used for cooking or beer
Siderosis iron deposition in liver, kidney,
heart, pancreas ? organ failure - Children Parents' iron pills are attractive to
kids in developed countries. The most common of
fatal childhood poisonings - Those with familial haemochromatosis This common
inherited disease has symptoms similar to
siderosis (above)The first sign of this disease
is often inoperable liver cancer
Note N
57Vitamin A deficiency in public health
- Vit. A deficiency is a public health problem in
over 70 countries, especially in Africa, SE Asia
the W Pacific where it affects 250 million
mostly aged 0-4 years - Night blindness may predict vitamin A deficiency,
with risk of permanent total blindness if it
progresses. - There is also increased risk of severe illness
and death from infections such as diarrhoeal
disease and measles - Vitamin A supplements can be beneficial when
given as seldom as once a year. Check the latest
information at - http//www.micronutrient.org/english/View.asp?x57
7
58Vitamin A deficiency perinatal health
- Vit. A is crucial for maternal child survival,
supplements in high-risk areas can dramatically
decrease maternal mortality - In pregnant women Vit. A deficiency is seen in
the last trimester when demands by unborn child
mother are highest - Partnerships for progress in vitamin A
nutritionIn 1998 WHO, UNICEF, CIDA, USAID (ia)
launched a global initiative in 40 countries that
has to date averted 1.25 million deaths, by
giving vitamin A to kids at clinics
This issue is under active investigation. For
the status at time of writing see Lancet, Volume
376, Issue 9744, p 873 - 874, 11 September 2010
59Vitamin A deficiency perinatal health
- Night blindness in pregnant women - an early
danger sign - In children, the cost-effective prevention is
breast-feeding - Genetically engineered high Vit. A rice crops
could help - Caution Vit. A supplements as retinol are
controversial. It can be toxic teratogenic (?
birth defects). However, given as carotene,
vitamin A supplements are safe, leading only to
an orange tinge in skin colour.
Page 59
60Iodine deficiency disorders
- The worlds major cause of preventable brain
damageIn 1990 1.6 billion people were at risk
in over 100 countries, mainly in parts of Africa
and Asia where soil is iodine-deficient - 38 Million children have mental impairment from
lack of iodine - As a result of the micronutrient initiative, this
number is falling
For latest data, see http//www.micronutrient.org
/english/View.asp?x578
61Iodine deficiency disorders
- Consequences start before birth and continue
afterward - In utero, spontaneous abortion, congenital
abnormalities retarded foetal development - In early childhood and progress toward
adolescence iodine deficiency causes cretinism,
an irreversible retardation. Impacts home,
school, work - Today we are on the verge of eliminating iron
deficiency --- a major public health triumph
like getting rid of smallpox polio
Page 61
62Toward iodine sufficiency iodized salt
- A cost-effective low-tech therapy, iodized salt
costs just 0.05 per person per year - UNICEF, ICCIDD (International Council for Control
of IDD), the salt industry have set up
iodization programmes.Globally, 66 of
households have access to iodized salt. - As of 2009 the number of at risk countries has
been halved! - However, progress has slowed and we are a decade
behind promises of the international community. - 54 countries are still affected efforts must
continue
63Nutrition in Global HealthCauses, mechanisms,
solutions Nutrition is crucial to global health
MDGs
- Overview of nutrition across humankind
- Human nutrition fundamentals in global context
- Top 6 nutrition problems, their solutions
- Nutrition across the life cycles of rich poor
- Cause effect in population nutrition
- Overview and where we are now
- Bridge to Part 2 Roadmap to a world without hunger
Page 63
64Nutrition through the life-cycle
65Factors in perinatal nutrition (see also Acute
malnutrition module)
- Nutritional health begins in the womb a healthy
outcome to a pregnancy requires that mother be
well nourished good feeding must initiated early - The most common birth defects result from a
deficiency of folic acid in the diet of the
pregnant mother, Best outcomes require folic acid
supplementation before conception!
66Factors in perinatal nutrition (see also Module
on Acute malnutrition)
- Delaying clamping the umbilical cord until it
stops pulsing ?iron stores see
www.naturalchildbirth.org/natural/resources/labor/
labor04.htm http//apps.who.int/rhl/pregnancy_chil
dbirth/childbirth/3rd_stage/jccom/en/index.html - Ideally, babies should receive vitamins E K
injections at birth - A baby whos healthy at birth may experience
"failure to thrive" (or "growth faltering") in
the first year of life. So .. - Good infant feeding behaviors must start early.
Most importantly, breast-feeding should be
initiated within an hour of birth maintained
exclusively for 6 months. - Breastfeeding could prevent 1.3 million deaths
each year http//www2.unicef.org/nutrition/index_
22657.html -
Page 66
67Perinatal nutrition requires attention1
- Malnutrition in pregnancy ? birth defects low
birth-weight - Failure to thrive is an early danger sign,
requiring investigation - Nutrition in infancy to early life impacts
physical cognitive development. It determines
immediate future risks of blindness, thyroid
function, bone development, more - Under-nutrition or deficiencies of many
micronutrients can cause failure to thrive - Iron, vitamins K and E are of particular
importance. Refer to - 1http//www.who.int/nutrition/topics/infantfeeding
_recommendation/en/index.html
68Malnutrition in early childhood
- Children are at special need because they are at
the fastest-growing stage of life. Problems an
adult could survive can be lethal to a child - This is the most vulnerable period a child is
developing physically mentally. Damage can be
permanent - Most importantly, they are unable to fend for
themselves depend on others (parents, others)
for health survival - They are the planets future. We owe it to them
to ourselves to ensure that they grow well, with
a sense that they have reason to invest in the
future, in a caring world
69Parenthetically a personal perspective
- How easily we see the moral failings of the past.
Slavery, the holocausts genocides, conquests
motivated by greed - When future generations look amazed at the moral
blindness of this generation, what will stand
out? Clearly child hunger - Where life expectancy is short, toddlers are
orphans. In war or famine a region may lack
necessities. You cant blame a child - Yet in rich countries, yes, the US Canada, we
turn our empty eyes and hands away from those
outside our borders - A napalmed child turned a nations mind to peace.
What will it take to open our eyes to children
dying of hunger? -
Page 69
70Nutrition through the life cycle - adolescence
- Adolescence carries risks for both poor
affluent - Adolescent adult patterns of food consumption
activity massively impact immediate future
health risks - Adolescents are notoriously careless about
health. Their eating patterns can lead quickly to
obesity or anorexia.
71Nutrition through the life cycle - adolescence
- Adolescence carries risks for both poor
affluent - Dieting can lead to deficiencies of vit. C,
protein, folic acid in a sedentary person. Even
if a good mix of foods is consumed, total food
intake may be insufficient. - A pattern of healthy eating in adolescence sets a
pattern that can promote lifelong health - A foundation for healthy bones is set by
exercise, calcium, vitamin D. After early adult
life, bones go slowly downhill
Page 71
72Nutrition through the life cycle adult life
- Nutrition acute infectious diseases
- Malnutrition depletes immunity leading to
increased risk severity of infections
parasites AIDS, malaria, etc. - Flagrant deficiencies of specific micronutrients
can put at risk the life health of the mother
in pregnancy lactation - Nutritional anaemias, pellagra, blindness, skin
disordersberiberi, scurvy, etc, can range in
severity from mild to fatal
Page 72
73Adult life - degenerative diseases
- In late life, risk of breast, prostatic, most
other cancers are predicted by diet, obesity,
inactivity or smoking in adult life - Also heart disease, strokes, osteoporosis,
diabetes - Cancers and diabetes are now leading causes of
death disability in low- and middle-income
countries (see Lancet August 13, 2009) - Nearly two-thirds of the worlds 7.6 million
cancer-related deaths now occur in developing
nations.
74Differential nutritional vulnerability of females
- Women are much more prone to nutritional anaemias
since they need to replace red cells lost in
menstruation - Women are the majority of elders, increasingly so
in Asia and Africa. Osteoporosis is more common
in the elderly - Osteoporosis is a major cause of illness,
disability and death. The annual number of hip
fractures worldwide will rise from 1.7 million in
1990 to around 6.3 million by 2050.
75Differential nutritional vulnerability of females
- Women suffer 80 of hip fractures lifetime risk
30 - 40 compared with 13 for men. - Osteoporosis prevention (exercise, calcium,
vitamin D) must start well before age 30 when
bones still respond. - Negative calcium balance in later life is not
very responsive to nutritional measures.
Page 75
76Under- over-nutrition occur in all cultures
- Disparities in income, nutrition health care
are increasing between countries within groups
in the same country - In addition, in low and middle income countries
diseases of overnutrition are increasingly common - Obesity related disorders, including diabetes,
are now as important in some lower to middle
income countries as in North America and the
European Union
77Also, under-nutrition occurs in many rich nations
- In rich nations, enormous wealth for some has
left others ravaged by health costs,
unemployment, foreclosures - Developed countries have marginalized cultural
groups. Hunger is common in N S America, China
E Europe - For example, 49 of US children (and over 80 of
black children) require food-aid at some time
during childhood - Scandinavia few western European countries are
almost the only exceptions
Page 77
78Overnutrition is no longer limited to rich
countries
- Obesity is a growing problem worldwide,
particularly among those who lack resources for a
wide range of food choices. - All too often, the cheapest foods are high
calorie, poor in nutrients, rich in sugar, salt,
fat, trans-fats - The predominant cause of obesity is
under-exercising rather than overeating. On
average, overweight people eat slightly fewer
calories than lean people, but are much less
active - Obesity increases risk of many disorders, most
notably cardiovascular disease, cancer,
adult-onset diabetes. Prevention is much better
than cure.
79Overnutrition is no longer limited to rich
countries
- Previously, the poorest were almost immune to
diabetes, hypertension, gout, atherosclerosis
heart disease - No longer. These are growing problems, impacting
health worldwide. In the next few slides well
consider prevention. - Diabetes has reached epidemic proportions
threatening, vision, kidney function, mobility,
heart-health life itself. - A cluster of symptoms, hypertension,
hyperlipidemia, and hyperglycemia is sometimes
called metabolic syndrome - Each of them increases risk of heart disease, and
together the risk is greatly amplified. Read on..
Page 79
80Prevention of heart attacks and strokes
- Risk factors hypertension, hyperlipidemias (LDL
/ bad cholesterol), inactivity diabetes. All
correlated with obesity - Smoking is the most life-shortening risk factor
of all - These risks can be changed earlier or later, by
modification of diet other life-style changes
or medication - In the past 5 years research has established that
exercise a lean body are the most powerful
predictors of a long healthy life, and also of
clear thinking into old age
81Prevention of heart attacks and strokes
- There is no easy solution to obesity. In a
typical study lt10 of people dieting, lt10 of
those exercising, and lt15 of those exercising
dieting, lost weight. - However, over 80 of those who underwent stomach
stapling or banding lost weight! - Not very encouraging, for lifestyle treatment.
Many argue that surgery to control weight should
be done more often
Page 81
82Measures to diminish cardiovascular risks
- Lifestyle measures have greatest impact in older
people! - Increasing consumption of fruit vegetables by
one to two servings can cut cardiovascular risk
by 30 - Reduction of blood pressure by 6 mm Hg reduces
stroke risk by 40 heart attack by 15.
Hydrochlorthiazides (diuretics) are inexpensive
and effective - Moreover, a 10 reduction in LDL cholesterol
reduces the risk of coronary heart disease by 30
83Measures to diminish cardiovascular risks
- Modest cutbacks in saturated fat salt improve
blood pressure lipids diminish risk of
cardiovascular disease - Lifestyle measures are, optimally, combined with
pharmaceutical intervention - Best practices in the area of diabetes
cardiovascular disease are a moving target.
Anyone teaching or practicing in this area needs
skills in finding evidence-based information in
an ocean of misinformation.
Page 83
84Nutrition in later life and old age
- Worldwide, the proportion of people over 60 is
increasing. By 2025, the world will have more
than 1.2 billion older persons two-thirds of
them in low income countries - The foundation laid in earlier life determines
risk ofdiabetes, heart disease, hypertension,
strokes, osteoporosis, cancer, etc. All these
bring special nutritional concerns. - Many of the diseases of late life are diagnosed
too late for effective treatment. Prevention at
an early age is the goal
85Nutrition in later life and old age
- Old age can be cut short by many kinds of
malnutrition - Deficiencies of calcium, iron, water, vit. B12
can severely compromise old age - Loss of taste and smell can render the elderly at
risk for food poisoning from spoiled food - Loss of thirst sensitivity in this age group
makes dehydration (inadequate water intake) a
common cause of confusion, headache,
occasionally kidney stones - Prevention is better than cure, symptomatic
treatments that are effective ,are often
unavailable to the aged in LMICs
Page 85
86Nutrition in Global HealthCauses, mechanisms,
solutions Nutrition is crucial to global health
MDGs
- Overview of nutrition across humankind
- Human nutrition fundamentals in global context
- Top six nutrition problems, their solutions
- Nutrition across the life cycles of rich poor
- Cause effect in population nutrition
- Overview and where we are now
- Bridge to Part 2 Roadmap to a world without hunger
Page 86
87Determinants of population nutrition
Any broken link can ? nutritional
inequities. (think about how )
88The mechanisms of hunger many paths
Notice how one path can feed-back to affect
others As diagrammed by WHO in
Repositioning Nutrition as Central to
Development A Strategy for Large-Scale Action
89Sub-determinants of nutritional sufficiency
- Each factor has its own contingencies. Here are a
few - Economic development depends on agricultural
sustainability - irrigation soil maintenance (crop rotation,
contour plowing) - seeds, fertilizers, appropriate insecticides
- Agricultural productivity depends on good
harvests - climatic drought and floods
- drought - and frost-resistant crops
- hybrid seeds and related biotechnology
- market for any excess crop, non-exploitative
trade
90Sub-determinants of nutritional sufficiency
- Each factor has its own contingencies. Here are a
few more - Stability includes freedom from disruptive forces
- war (revolts, invasion, political upheaval,
social disruption) - exploitation from outside unequal trading
practices - corruption externally multinational
corporations offer bribes and rich nations
tolerate this because it benefits them - corruption internally where some developed
nations set a poor example e.g.
non-transparent procurement policies
Note O
Page 90
91Poverty - greatest cause of malnutrition(hunger,
blindness, disease, birth defects,
maternal/neonatal death)
- The causes of poverty are disputed no one
wants to be part of the cause. What we know is. - Poverty doesn't just happen, it is caused by
economic, political, social geographical
circumstances decisions - Usually these decisions are made outside the
groups of people most affected by it!
Note P
92Poverty - greatest cause of malnutrition(hunger,
blindness, disease, birth defects,
maternal/neonatal death)
- Old people, women and under-supported children
are most likely to be impacted by poverty - Uneven distribution 2/3 of undernourished people
live in Asia - Hunger is growing fastest in Sudan, Rwanda,
Burundi, Chad D.R. Congo, Sierra Leone, Zimbabwe,
Somalia
Page 92
93Nutrition in Global Health Nutrition is crucial
Millions more are fed, but Nutrition is crucial
-
- Overview of nutrition across humankind
- Human nutrition fundamentals in global context
- Top six nutrition problems, their solutions
- Nutrition across the life cycles of rich poor
- Cause effect in population nutrition
- Overview and where we are now
- Bridge to Part 2 Roadmap to a world without hunger
Page 93
94Where are we? Considerable hope for the future,
with great distress urgency in the present
- Globally, more are now adequately fed than ever
before. - Many populations are growing ... and yet the
percentage being fed continues to increase - The MDGs will mostly be mostly met ... but not on
schedule.
95Where are we? Great hope for the future, with
great distress urgency in the present
- Does that mean we are doing enough? Absolutely
not! - Improvements in nutrition are not equally spread
in Africa more are hungry - Most of those born today will live to see hunger
shrink to temporary pockets, managed by relief
aid - Meanwhile, even as extreme hunger decreases, its
too slow to stop the needless loss of millions of
lives each year
Page 95
96What has changed? At last its clear
Disparities are now so great that there is almost
complete agreement that the plight of the poorest
must be addressed The cost of conferring great
benefits is a fleabite to the rich. 20 from an
individual can save a childs life and 0.7 of
GDP from the richest nations could, in two
decades, wipe out the deadliest disparities
97What has changed? At last its clear
Whats needed was defined in 2001.
Amazingly 22 nations signed on to fund 7 MDGs
with 60 indicators of success, and to provide the
funds!1st aim eradicate extreme poverty
hunger
Weve seen what worked what didnt. The MDG
projections were accurate, but ...
Page 97
98While some well-intended nations ...
... honoured their commitments in full, or at a
higher level (here we honour northern EU,
Luxemburg Netherlands) ... most provide
approximately half the aid that they undertook
and are increasing (here, much of west-central
EU) ... a very few provided a third or less are
decreasing (here we include the nations of N.
America Japan)
the consequences are unsurprising.
Page 98
99The consequences are unsurprising
- Thanks to nations individuals who put
worthwhile goals ahead of strictly national
interests, a better nourished world emerges - The majority of nations are now solidly on the
development ladder and the number grows each year - Millions die unnecessarily in E and S Asia,
sub-Saharan Africa, and the major cause rests
with a few nations
Page 99
100Nutrition in Global Health Bridge to a roadmap
to a world without hunger
- Why nutrition is crucial to global health MDGs
- Overview of nutrition across humankind
- Human nutrition fundamentals in global context
- Top six world nutrition problems, their
solutions - Nutrition across the life cycle in rich and
poor nations - Cause effect Determinants in population
nutrition - Where we are now Overview Millions more are
fed but without urgent action, millions more will
starve - On to Part 2 Roadmap to a world without hunger
Page 100
101Roadmap toward a world without hunger
Weve concluded Part I of the nutrition
modules with a preliminary assessment of
prospects for eradicating extreme poverty
hunger. In Part II we ask what works and what
doesnt? We will
- discuss the confounders wild cards
elaborate on the range of possible future
scenarios - contend that many controversies fail to see
that many competing approaches are, in fact,
complementary - ... categorize competing viewpoints as evidence-
or ideology- based subject them to the test
of science - survey current strategies, assessing their
strengths, weaknesses, applicability to real
life problems
102Review your pre-quiz to confirm that you have
advanced your knowledge. As we move now to the
future, here is part of the pre-quiz for the Part
II Nutrition module
- Does globalization promote nutritional health?
For whom? - Is free enterprise good for everyone? If not,
for whom? - Are most African leaders dictators?
- Does most aid to Africa end up in Swiss bank
accounts? - Does food aid do more harm than good?
- Academics politicians argue about these
questions and what should be done. Does that mean
that we dont know what to do? We will see in
Part II that the answers are clear
103Summary What youve learned
- Nutritional health is not equitably distributed
worldwide - Correcting nutritional inequities is
crucial to a viable future - We've reviewed nutritional principles in global
context - Nutritional health, public health,
economics are inseparable - Worst nutritional risks water, protein, iron,
vitamin A, iodine - As you reframe this information in your own
context , it will help you see what to look for,
what to ask for, what to do
104Applying what youve learned
- Ranking risks in the life cycle - kids mothers
are top priority - Help you set priorities best practices for
risk mitigation - We have seen setbacks, slow progress toward the
MDGs. Yet - There is substantial agreement about what
needs to be done - Reasons for hope Fortunes given away, crazy
ideas, loans to the poorest repaid, workable
strategies toward a world without hunger
clear-sighted agents of change - We return to our task with renewed clarity
energy
105Acknowledgments
- I single out a few of many whose insights,
persistence, and courage dispelled the pessimism
I felt when I began this task. - Jeffrey Sachs, Yunus Muhammad, Raj Patel, Kumi
Naidoo, Paul Collier, Howard Zinn, Vandana Shiva,
Frances Moore Lappé - Also the hundreds of passionate students,
practitioners, and researchers at meetings of the
Canadian Consortium of Global Health who passed
on to me their energy vision. Pre-eminent among
those who encouraged me are Vic Neufeld Tom Hall
106End of module
- Please refer to the supplementary contents for
more information about this module. - Reserved for GHEC notes