Repositioning Nutrition Education: Challenge for Public Health

Authors

  • Nilofer Fatimi Safdar School of Public Health, Dow University of Health Sciences

Abstract

The fundamental role played by good nutrition in enabling personal, social and economic development is now widely recognized as presenting an important global challenge that has to be addressed if major national and international problems are to be resolved in the coming decades. Nutrition is crucial to both individual and for national development. Unlike many other countries in South Asia, nutrition-related health statistics are dismal in Pakistan with both under-nutrition and malnutrition highly prevalent. More than 40% of the population suffers from chronic malnutrition nationally. Pakistani women and children suffer the
highest rates of malnutrition in the world with a national nutritional stunting of 43.7% in children under five.
According to the National Nutrition Survey (NNS) of 2011, 70% of Pakistani children and adults have essential micronutrient deficiencies (vitamins and minerals)1 . Chronic disease are more evident and is contributing to the burden of disease with more than 40 % of women overweight or obese2 . The extent of the country’s nutrition problem is reflected by the fact that among the eight Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), "malnutrition" remains the most important issue and continues to hinder all efforts towards achieving the remaining MDGs2-3. Therefore malnutrition is not simply a health hazard but a serious impediment towards Pakistan’s national development.

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Author Biography

Nilofer Fatimi Safdar, School of Public Health, Dow University of Health Sciences

Asst Professor and Program Director Nutrition, School of Public health

References

Aga Khan University PMRC, UNICEF. Pakistan National Nutrition Survey-2011, 2012.

Abbasy S-u-H, Kumar RJ, Rehman R, Nauman M, Kamali A, Azhar M. An insight into the perpetuating existence of malnutrition in Pakistani women and children. E1 Mednifico J 2013.

Bhutta ZA, Gazdar H, Haddad L. Seeing the unseen: breaking the logjam of undernutrition in Pakistan. IDS Buletin 2013; 44:1-9.

Khandelwal S, Paul T, Haddad L, Bhalla S, Gillespie S, Laxminarayan R. Postgraduate education in nutrition in south Asia: a huge mismatch between investments and needs. BMC med edu 2014; 14:3.

Ellahi B, Annan R, Sarkar S, Amuna P, Jackson AA. Building systemic capacity for nutrition: training towards a professionalised workforce for Africa. Proceedings of the Nutr Soc 2015; 74:496-504.

Sodjinou R, Bosu WK, Fanou N, Déart L, Kupka R, Tchibindat F, et al. A systematic assessment of the current capacity to act in Nutrition in west Africa: cross-country similarities and differences. Glob Health Act 2014; 7.

Nutrition policy guidance note Sindh. draft version ed: World Bank 19 December 2012.

Repositioning nutrition as central to development. A strategy for large-scale action. Washington DC: The World Bank. 2006.

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Published

2017-04-29

How to Cite

Safdar, N. F. (2017). Repositioning Nutrition Education: Challenge for Public Health. Journal of the Dow University of Health Sciences (JDUHS), 9(3), 81–82. Retrieved from https://jduhs.com/index.php/jduhs/article/view/1425

Issue

Section

Editorial