Showing posts with label children five. Show all posts
Showing posts with label children five. Show all posts

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Nation tries to reduce stunting malnutrition

Vietnam is facing challenges in its annual goals to reduce the rate of malnutrition among children under five years old from 30 percent to 2 percent by the year 2020.

Nutritionists met in Hanoi on Nov. 11 and said the target - which is a crucial element to improving the height of Vietnamese people - would be hard to reach in the next decade despite the good results that have already been achieved.

Ministry of Health statistics show that the rate of malnutrition, which leads to stunted growth, fell from nearly 60 percent in 1985 to 47 percent in 1994 and 31.9 in 2009.

The percentage of children under five who are underweight due to malnutrition reduced from 51.5 percent in 1985 to 18.9 percent in 2009. Studies have shown an average height increase of 1-2 centimetres in Vietnamese children and adults in recent decades, according to the National Institute of Nutrition (NIN). "By analysing factors that contribute to malnutrition in children, we can reduce the current numbers. However, the speed of reduction will be slower than the rate in the 90s," said Deputy Director of NIN Le Danh Tuyen.

Mothers needed to get proper nutrition prior and throughout their pregnancies, he said. They also needed to provide their growing children with proper nutrition, especially before they reach the age of five as children under five need sufficient energy and nutrition to grow properly.

"In order to firmly reduce stunted growth due to malnutrition, comprehensive improvement in providing food to families, health care services and environmental and care taking activities are needed. Emphasis has been put on caring for the quality of nutrition, particularly at the family level," said Tuyen.

Malnutrition prevention activities should be socialised in all corners of the country with a specific policy designed for each region. Areas that are threatened by the risk of food insecurity should develop measures to ensure sustained provision of food. Production activities and self-sustaining food production are encouraged along with a strengthening of nutrition communication activities./.

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Nation tries to reduce stunting malnutrition

HA NOI — Viet Nam is facing challenges in its annual goals to reduce the rate of malnutrition among children under five years old from 30 per cent to 2 per cent by the year 2020.

Nutritionists met in Ha Noi yesterday and said the target - which is a crucial element to improving the height of Vietnamese people - would be hard to reach in the next decade despite the good results that have already been achieved.

Ministry of Health statistics show that the rate of malnutrition, which leads to stunted growth, fell from nearly 60 per cent in 1985 to 47 per cent in 1994 and 31.9 in 2009.

The percentage of children under five who are underweight due to malnutrition reduced from 51.5 per cent in 1985 to 18.9 per cent in 2009. Studies have shown an average height increase of 1-2 centimetres in Vietnamese children and adults in recent decades, according to the National Institute of Nutrition (NIN). "By analysing factors that contribute to malnutrition in children, we can reduce the current numbers. However, the speed of reduction will be slower than the rate in the 90s," said Deputy Director of NIN Le Danh Tuyen.

Mothers needed to get proper nutrition prior and throughout their pregnancies, he said. They also needed to provide their growing children with proper nutrition, especially before they reach the age of five as children under five need sufficient energy and nutrition to grow properly.

"In order to firmly reduce stunted growth due to malnutrition, comprehensive improvement in providing food to families, health care services and environmental and care taking activities are needed. Emphasis has been put on caring for the quality of nutrition, particularly at the family level," said Tuyen.

Malnutrition prevention activities should be socialised in all corners of the country with a specific policy designed for each region. Areas that are threatened by the risk of food insecurity should develop measures to ensure sustained provision of food. Production activities and self-sustaining food production are encouraged along with a strengthening of nutrition communication activities. — VNS

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Monday, November 29, 2010

Children's well-being targeted

Children play a traditional game in Thanh An Commune, Can Gio District in HCM City. The city has earmarked $2.7 million to improve protection of city children. — VNA/VNS Photo The Anh

Children play a traditional game in Thanh An Commune, Can Gio District in HCM City. The city has earmarked $2.7 million to improve protection of city children. — VNA/VNS Photo The Anh

HCM CITY — HCM City had earmarked VND52 billion (US$2.7 million) for implementing a 10 year (2011-2020) action programme for children, a senior official said yesterday.

Phan Thanh Minh, head of the labour department's child protection and care office, said at a workshop that the programme would target health and nutrition, education, entertainment, water and living environment for children as well as protecting them from violence and all forms of abuse.

The city aims to have 97.5 per cent of children under one year old getting all the required vaccines and 98.7 per cent of children aged between six and 36 months old get their Vitamin A doses each year.

Another target is to have the average height of children under five years of age increase by at least 1.5cm and the rate of obesity among this age group kept to under 15 per cent.

The rate of bronchial infection among children aged between eight and 12 will be brought down to 1.5 per cent.

Infant mortality for one-year-olds will be brought down to one per 1,000 and that of children under five years old to 1.67 per 1,000.

Minh said that to implement these targets, the city would open health clinics in all wards, communes and towns and staff them with qualified health personnel to ensure the wellbeing of mothers and children.

He said the city would also strengthen public awareness campaigns on health and nutrition.

The city would create favourable conditions for all children aged six to enter first grade, and all high-school-age students would get admission to schools by 2020.

In order to protect the children, the city would try to reduce the number of street children, those working in harmful and dangerous environments, and those subjected to different kinds of abuse.

All children with the disabilities would be placed on welfare and given needed assistance, Minh said.

Efforts would be made to build enough cultural houses for children so that they would not lack healthy entertainment options, at least in 90 per cent of the city's wards, communes and towns as required by the Ministry of Culture, Sport and Tourism for children. — VNS

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