Today - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 24
About This Presentation
Title:

Today

Description:

Today Especially vulnerable populations Children 4 faces of hunger Starvation/Famine Malnutrition/Undernutrition Micro-nutrient deficiencies Nutrition-depleting illnesses – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:216
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 25
Provided by: UNC61
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Today


1
Today
  • Especially vulnerable populations
  • Children
  • 4 faces of hunger
  • Starvation/Famine
  • Malnutrition/Undernutrition
  • Micro-nutrient deficiencies
  • Nutrition-depleting illnesses
  • Time trajectories of hunger
  • Geographies of hunger

2
Especially vulnerable populations I
  • Increased likelihood of malnutrition and more
    serious consequences
  • Women in general due to cultural traditions that
    privilege food to males
  • Pregnant women
  • Poor nutrition low birth weight babies
  • Developmental problems for baby physically and
    mentally
  • Reduced resistance to diseases
  • Less able to breast feed ( less resistance
    for the baby as well)

3
Especially vulnerable populations II
  • Lactating women
  • Poor nutrition seldom greatly interferes with
    ability to produce milk
  • But, poor nutrition does deplete the mother's
    body of necessary nutrients
  • If nutrition is not better between end of
    lactation and next pregnancy spiral down to
    chronic anemia etc.
  • Elderly
  • Ability to fend off infections is reduced with
    great age and malnutrition hurts that as well

4
Especially vulnerable populations III
  • Children
  • Malnutrition in infants and children very
    problematic if timing coincides with critical
    growth processes
  • Up to age 5 risk is greatest
  • Especially at weaning age (approx 2 yrs)
  • Due to impure water used to make weaning foods
    (not sufficiently boiled due to lack of fuel) and
    general low hygiene gt
  • Kids die from diarrheal diseases and dehydration
    and malnutrition
  • Weaning foods are typically not nutrient-rich
    enough (e.g., maize gruels)

5
(No Transcript)
6
Four Faces of Hunger I
  • I. Starvation/Famine
  • Widespread to complete lack of protein/calorie
    nutrition
  • A small percentage of global hunger perhaps 1
    at risk annually
  • Leads to increased mortality (usually to
    infectious diseases not starvation per se)
  • Great social disruption gt increased problems
    with diseases and access to food
  • In any famine not all starve the well off can
    buy food -- thus NOT usually only a simple
    shortage

7
Four Faces of Hunger II
  • II. Malnutrition/Undernutrition
  • Seasonal or periodic P/C under-nutrition
  • Most serious effects on kids and special needs
    adults (pregnant and lactating women, the
    elderly)
  • measures of malnutrition in children
  • Stunting - stature too short for age/sex
    (adjusted for local norms) gt chronic
  • Wasting weight too light for age/sex (adjusted
    for local norms) gt acute

8
Four Faces of Hunger III
  • III. Micro-nutrient deficiencies
  • Vitamin and mineral shortages
  • Sometimes called hidden hunger
  • IV. Nutrition-depleting illnesses
  • Secondary malnutrition
  • Most common nutrient depleting diseases are
    infant/weanling diarrheas 5 million deaths
    annually world wide

9
Global Hunger
  • Global situation late 1990s
  • Data drawn from FAOs SOFA report 2007
  • http//www.fao.org/docrep/010/a1200e/a1200e00.htm
  • The International Food Policy Research Institute
  • http//www.ifpri.org/media/20071012GHI.asp
  • The concept of food security

10
Global Trajectories of Hunger I
  • Proportions undernourished (or food insecure)
  • Late 1970s 28
  • Late 1990s 17
  • Thus, some real progress
  • Millennium Development Goals and not met
  • Micro-nutrient deficiencies
  • Iron 40 of global south
  • Iodine 12 of global south
  • Vitamin A 14 of kids in global south

11
Global Trajectories of Hunger II
  • Absolute numbers undernourished (or food
    insecure)
  • 1970s 900m 2000 gt 800 m
  • gt decrease of 100m in absolute numbers (but
    smaller )
  • Children 1993 200 m now 175 m
  • World food summit target (MDG) in 2015 gt 400m
  • Current trajectory gt 475-500m by 2015
  • Progress in some places, regression in others

12
Regional differences malnourished or food insecure
  • Global South (i.e., the global poor)
  • Sub-Saharan Africa
  • E. Asia, SE Asia, Pacific
  • South Asia
  • Latin America Caribbean
  • Near East N. Africa
  • Developed Economies (mostly N America)

13
Source FAO
14
(No Transcript)
15
(No Transcript)
16
Source FAO
17
Number of malnourished children, 1993, 2010, and
2020 Source IFPRI IMPACT simulations.
18
Source FAO SOFA 2007
19
Source IFPRI Global Hunger Index 2007
20
(No Transcript)
21
Source FAO SOFA 2007
22
(No Transcript)
23
(No Transcript)
24
Countries with food shortfalls requiring
assistance
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com