FG expresses worries over increase rate of children malnourishment

The Federal Government has expressed concern over the increasing rate of malnutrition calling for concerted efforts to address it.
Minister of Budget and National Planning, Senator Udoma Udo Udoma, said this on Monday when he flagged off the 2018 Nutrition Week aimed at increasing awareness on the dangers posed by malnutrition and serve as a platform for mobilizing stakeholders towards addressing the scourge in the country.
Udoma who was represented at the event by the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry, Mr Olajide S. Odewale FCA, said the state of Nigeria’s food and nutrition is of utmost interest to the Government at all levels because if the situation is not attended to, malnutrition which is sometimes referred to as “the Silent Killer”, could lead to the death of young children.
Experts, he pointed out, say an estimated 2.5 million children under the age of five years might be in danger of being afflicted by severe acute malnutrition in Nigeria, a development he noted, is quite worrisome and calls for emergency measures to arrest the trend.
He said this year’s theme: “Nutrition: An Emergency”, was chosen to draw attention to the urgent measures that need to be taken by all relevant stakeholders in combating malnutrition.
“It is important to combat Malnutrition, because as I indicated earlier, it can cause death in young children, particularly those under five years of age,” he added.
According to him, even those who survive could end up with lower Intelligence Quotient (IQ) and impaired cognitive ability with resultant negative effects on their performance in school and productivity in later life.
The annual observation of the Nutrition Week, he noted, has been helping to create awareness regarding the importance of food and nutrition on child survival and its impact on development, productivity, economic growth and national development.
Previous editions have seen the launching and dissemination of a Revised National Policy on Food and Nutrition and the maiden edition of the Nigeria Nutrition Newsletter as well as the investiture of the wives of the President and State Governors as Nutrition ambassadors for the country and States respectively.
This has not only helped to underscore the importance the Government places on the campaign against malnutrition but also to mobilise support from State and Local Governments for the campaign.
The Minister pointed out that Investment in nutrition prevents under nutrition, builds human capital, boosts shared prosperity and improves health outcomes.
“Returns from programmes geared towards improving nutrition generally outweigh their ultimate costs while delay/failure in addressing malnutrition has high costs in terms of reduced productivity and, sometimes, higher budget outlay in addressing the consequences …”