- ‘The monograph  therefore        fills an important gap by providing an overview on which nutrition         interventions improve the nutrition status of women and children,  with        emphasis on the poor in developing countries. The purpose is to  define a        core menu of proven investment options supported by sound evidence  of        efficacy. We expect that this review will be a much-consulted  reference to        support evidence-based nutrition programming in developing  countries. This        review takes the perspective of low-income Asia ,         because the study was commissioned by the Asian Development Bank  to inform        its policy dialogue with Asian governments.’ (iii)
- ‘The review  draws on        global literature and its findings are relevant to all developing        countries. The review emphasizes what works and why – for each of  the        major nutrition problems in Asia :  micronutrient        deficiencies (vitamin A, iodine and anemia), low birthweight,  maternal        malnutrition, child growth retardation and arrested cognitive  development        in early childhood.’ (iii)
- ‘Asia has a  lower        prevalence of low birthweight (LBW) than any other continent,  ranging from        well over 30% in South Central Asia and Bangladesh to less than  10% in the        People’s Republic of China, the Philippines, Malaysia, and  Thailand. LBW        is strongly associated with undernutrition of mothers. About 60%  of women        in South Asia  and 40% in Southeast         Asia  are underweight (<45 kg). LBW is probably the  main        reason why over 50% of the children in Asia   are        underweight. It also increases the risk of other health and  developmental        problems. Interventions to reduce the prevalence of LBW should  therefore        receive very high priority. Randomized, controlled, efficacy  trials to        combat LBW have shown the following. Only supplements that provide  more        energy, rather than more protein, improve birthweight  significantly. In        populations where protein intake is inadequate, high protein  supplements        (>25% of energy) to pregnant women may even increase maternal  death        rates.’ (v)
- ‘In The  Gambia, locally        produced biscuits providing 1,017 kcal and 22 g protein per day  from        mid-pregnancy, reduced LBW prevalence by 39%, increased  birthweight by 136        g and reduced infant mortality by about 40%.’ (v)
- ‘Attention  should be paid        to improving the quality as well as the quantity of food consumed  during        pregnancy. There is little evidence that supplementation with  individual        nutrients (including calcium, folic acid, iron, zinc and vitamin  A) can        improve birthweight, other than possibly through a reduction in  preterm        delivery. However, micronutrient supplementation of  underprivileged        pregnant women is extremely important. It can lead to substantial        reductions in maternal anemia and may also reduce maternal  mortality,        birth defects and preterm delivery.’ (v-vi)
-        ‘Asia  has the highest prevalence of anemia  in the        world. About half of all anemic women live in the Indian  subcontinent.’        (vii)
- ‘No  conclusions can be        made about the benefits of iron supplementation during pregnancy  on        maternal or fetal health, function or survival.’ (vii)
- ‘Iron  supplementation of        anemic preschool children improves their cognitive and physical        development.’ (vii)
- ‘Iodine  deficiency        disorders (IDD) are a serious problem in Asia .         Their prevalence in South-East Asia  exceeds  that in        all other regions of the world.’ (viii)
- ‘Cretinism  results from        maternal iodine deficiency during pregnancy. It can be prevented  by        supplementing the mother during pregnancy, preferably during the  first        trimester and no later than the second trimester. Supplementation  in late        pregnancy, if that is the first time the mother can be reached,  may still        provide some small benefits for instant function.’ (viii)
- ‘The  prevalence of        clinical vitamin A deficiency (VAD) is quite low. For the last  years in        which information is available on children in Asia ,         it ranged from 0.5 percent in Sri        Lanka Bangladesh 
- ‘Populations  with the        highest prevalence of VAD consume low amounts of animal products  and        fruits rich in beta-carotene.’ (viii)
- ‘High-dose  vitamin A        supplementation reduced mortality from diarrhea and measles by 23%  for        infants and for children age 6 months to 5 years.’ (ix)
- ‘Strong  epidemiological        evidence suggests a link between maternal and early childhood        undernutrition and increased adult risk of various chronic  diseases.’        (1)
- ‘Economic  losses from        undernutrition include, as percentages of total losses from all  causes:        foregone human productivity, 10-15%; foregone GDP, 5-10%; and  losses in        children’s disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), 20-25%.’ (4)
- ‘Improved  nutrition is a        particularly powerful antipoverty intervention because it can be  achieved        at low cost and it has a lifelong impact. In terms of a propoor,  economic        growth strategy that is sustainable, investment in nutrition is  one of the        best options.’ (4)
- ‘Many  non-nutrition or        indirect interventions, such as immunization and sanitation, have        significant nutrition effects but these are beyond the scope of  this        review.’ (5)
- ‘Infants who  weight        2,000-2,499 g at birth have a four-fold higher risk of neonatal  death than        those who weight 2,500-2,999 g, and a ten-fold higher risk than  those        weighing 3,000-3,499 g.’ (7)
- ‘In The  Gambia, being        born during and up to two months after the so-called ‘hungry  season’ was a        strong predictor of mortality after age 15 years. Being born in  the hungry        season was also associated with about a four-fold greater risk of  dying        between the ages of 15 and 45 years, and a ten-fold greater risk  of dying        between the ages of 35 and 45 years.’ (7-8)
- ‘Body Mass  index is        defined as weight (in kg) divided by height (in m) squared.’ (11)
- ‘Maternal  height,        although it contributes to total maternal mass, has less value  than weight        or BMI for predicting IUGR. Low height is a good indicator of  obstetric        complications such as obstructed labor and need for assisted  delivery. It        is therefore useful to refer short women to appropriate childbirth         facilities.’ (12)
- ‘Evidence for  an effect        of iron supplements on preterm delivery and birthweight is still  weak, due        to a lack of randomized controlled trials.’ (14)
- ‘Folic acid  taken prior        to conception and during the first six weeks of pregnancy does  afford some        protection against neural tube defects.’ (14)
- ‘Cochrane  meta-analyses        found no effects of zinc supplementation on labor outcomes or on  maternal        or fetal mortality or morbidity.’ (14)
- ‘Calcium  supplementation        during pregnancy reduces the risk of hypertension, pre-eclampsia  and        eclampsia, and lowers the blood pressure of the neonate.’ (15)
- ‘A  comprehensive review        of 24 non-nutritional pregnancy interventions found that only two  improved        birthweight. These were smoking cessation, which improved  birthweight and        lowered term LBW by about 20%, and antimalarial prophylaxis.’ (16)
- ‘There remains  little        evidence that growth retardation suffered in early childhood can  be        significantly caught up in adolescence.’ (18)
- ‘IUGR may  produce some        prenatal insults to the fetal reproductive system that damages  future        reproduction, manifesting itself a generation later.’ (19)
- ‘LBW is  probably the main        reason why over 50% of the children in Asia   are        underweight.’ (21)
- ‘Young  maternal age at        conception is an additional risk factor for poor pregnancy outcome  so that        it is also important to target interventions to those who are  still        growing.’ (22)
- ‘The most  common        immediate causes of poor growth of humans in developing countries  include:        poor nutrition status at conception and undernutrition in  utero; inadequate        breastfeeding; delayed complementary feeding, inadequate quality  or        quantity of complementary feeding; impaired absorption of  nutrients due to        intestinal infections or parasites; or combinations of these  problems.’        (24)
- ‘Interactions  between        inadequate dietary intake a disease, in the form of a vicious  cycle, have        been referred to as the ‘malnutrition-infection complex.’ Strictly         speaking, however, it is a complex between the two immediate  causes, with        undernutrition being the outcome. This complex remains the most  prevalent        public health problem in the world today.’ (26)
- ‘The short  stature of        adults in developing countries is largely the result of poor  growth during        the first three years of life.’ (27)
- ‘Complementary  feeding is        defined as the period during which foods or liquids are provided  along        with continued breastfeeding. Complementary food is the term used  to        describe any nutrient-containing foods or liquids, other than  breastmilk,        that are given to young children during the period of  complementary        feeding.’ (29)
- ‘One strategy  for        improving the amount and bioavailability of micronutrients is to  increase        consumption of animal products. Animal products are high in most        micronutrients, and many minerals and vitamins are better absorbed  from        milk, meat and eggs than they are from plant-derived foods.’ (33)
- ‘A dramatic  example of        the effects of withholding animal products from infants and young  children        is provided by studies of macrobiotic diets in the        Netherlands 
- ‘Given the  poor economic        situation of many households in developing countries, is it  reasonable to        recommend that their children consume more animal products? For  some, this        may not be a practical solution. There is, however, increasing  awareness        that animal products are likely [sic] be the only unfortified  foods that        can provide enough micronutrients to children, and that it is  feasible to        increase their consumption. Viable strategies, in many situations,         include: educating the mother to target small amounts of animal  products        (such as liver) to her youngest children; encouraging consumption  of        cheaper animal products (e.g., eggs, fish, dried milk); and  supporting        home production of small animals, fish and birds.’ (34)
- ‘The  absorption of iron        from cereals and legumes can be improved by consuming more vitamin  C in        the same meal.’ (34)
- ‘In developing  countries,        iron deficiency occurs early in infancy, and approximately 50% of  infants        are iron deficient by the end of their first year of life.’ (36)
- ‘Interventions  with        single micronutrients have shown the following benefits for  children with        low intakes and/or a deficiency of the respective nutrients:  vitamin A        prevents eye lesions, causes a substantial reduction in mortality  from        measles and diarrhea, and increases Hb synthesis; iron improves  cognitive        and motor development of anemic infants and children; zinc  improves growth        of children who are stunted or have low plasma zinc. Iodine  reduces infant        mortality and goiter prevalence and improves motor and mental  function;        vitamin B12 improves growth and cognitive function.’  (40)
- ‘Anemia is  usually caused        by lack of iron, the most common nutrient deficiency.’ (43)
- ‘Malaria and  hookworm,        the major non-nutrition risk factors for anemia, affect both men  and        women.’ (43)
- ‘The WHO estimated that about 40% of the world’s population (more than 2 billion individuals) suffer from anemia.’ (43)
- ‘The WHO estimated that about 40% of the world’s population (more than 2 billion individuals) suffer from anemia.’ (43)
- ‘The  prevalence of anemia        in developing countries is about four times that of developed  countries.’        (43)
- ‘Women have a        substantially higher prevalence of anemia than men, because about  half of        their iron requirement is needed to replace iron losses in  menstruation.’        (44)
- ‘A major cause  of anemia        is infection with malaria or other parasites…In tropical Africa,  for        example, malaria and anemia explain the majority of visits to  health        centers. In        Tanzania 
- ‘It is usually  considered        unethical to withhold iron during pregnancy where there is a high        prevalence of anemia. Therefore, randomized, controlled trials are  rare,        especially in developing countries.’ (45)
- ‘A substantial  amount of        evidence confirms that iron supplementation of anemia school  children        improves their school performance, verbal and other skills.’ (48)
- ‘There has  been        considerable interest in the possibility that iron supplements do  not have        to be given as frequently as once a day to be effective.’ (48)
- ‘One way to  improve the        absorption of iron from food is to increase the intake of vitamin  C. This        enhances the absorption of non-hem iron if the two nutrients are  consumed        within an hour of each other.’ (50)
- ‘Of all of the  strategies        used to deliver additional iron to humans, food fortification has  the        greatest potential to improve the iron status of the largest  number of        people.’ (51)
- ‘Iron  fortification poses        no risk for the normal individual. Iron absorption falls, as iron  stores        increase, to protect against excessive iron  accumulation...Overall, it is        true that: ‘the potential benefit of an iron intervention to a        predominantly iron-deficient population is likely to vastly  outweigh any        risk this may pose for a few individuals.’ ’ (53)
- ‘Weekly  delivery of iron        supplements does improve iron status, almost as well as daily  delivery in        the case of children and adolescents. This programmatic approach  may be a        cheaper, more effective way to prevent iron deficiency. Ways  should be        sought to deliver weekly iron through schools, community-based  programs        and other situations. However, daily supplements are still more  effective        for pregnant women because of their high iron requirements and the  limited        window of time available for supplementation.’ (54)
- ‘The main  cause of iodine        deficiency in soils is leaching by glaciation, floods or high  rainfall.        Mountainous regions including the Andes  and  the        Himalayas  therefore have some of the  highest        prevalences of iodine deficiency. Iodine deficiency also occurs  due to        flooding; for example, in        Bangladesh India Ganges . In areas of endemic  iodine        deficiency, the water and foods (plants and animals grown there)  have low        iodine content.’ (55)
- ‘Goiter itself  is        unsightly but usually harmless. Importantly, its presence  indicates that        other damaging effects of iodine deficiency are already present.’  (56)
- ‘Iodine  deficiency is the        leading cause of preventable mental retardation and brain damage        worldwide.’ (56)
- ‘Mean  cognitive and        psychomotor performance scores were 13.5 IQ points lower in iodine         deficient individuals.’ (56)
- ‘The injection  of iodized        oil before pregnancy can prevent endemic cretinism.’ (57)
- ‘Iodine  supplementation        during pregnancy results in a substantial reduction in fetal and  neonatal        deaths.’ (58)
- ‘The public  health        benefits of salt iodization, however, far outweigh risks from  toxicity.’        (58)
- ‘The main  cause of VAD is        a low intake of animal products, which contain high amounts of  absorbable        retinol. Liver and kidneys are a concentrated source of vitamin  A.’        (61)
- ‘Some  randomized,        placebo-controlled trials in pregnant women show that pregnancy  outcomes        may be improved in HIV women if they receive high dose vitamin A.’   (64)
- ‘A review of  food-based        strategies recognized three main types: increase production of        micronutrient-rich foods, from either commercial or home  gardening, small        livestock or aquaculture; increase intake of micronutrient-rich  foods        through nutrient education, mass media and other programs intended  to        change food selection; and improve nutrient bioavailability, by  food        processing or the simultaneous consumption of enhancing foods.’  (64-65)
- ‘Based on  lessons from        multiple experiences that achieved significant impacts on child  nutrition,        the following technical elements of growth promotion are essential  for        designing new programs and for assessing existing operations:  programs        should be community- or neighborhood-based, and aimed at universal         coverage; monitoring individual weight begun at birth and done  frequently        (monthly) for the first 18-24 months; child caretakers involved in         monitoring; adequate growth (weight gain), rather than nutrition  status,        as the indicator of action, either alone of combined with other  easily        obtained information on the child’s condition; growth charts to  record the        growth progress of individual children, to make growth status  visible to        the caretakers; analysis of the causes of inadequate growth is  required,        leading to clear and feasible options for action; negotiation with         families, guided by tailored recommendations for what they will do  to        improve their children’s growth; and follow-up.’ (70)
- ‘Combined  interventions        are likely to be more efficient than separate interventions,  because they        are intended for the same population and make use of the same  facilities,        transportation and client contacts. From an economic standpoint,  the        marginal costs of integrated programs, that combine interventions  are        expected to be low, relative to impact.’ (71)
- ‘Example of a  job        description for a community growth promoter: Maintain a roster of  all        children under two in the community-enrolling children at birth.  Organize        a monthly weighing of all under-2s in a community, ensuring 100%        participation. Assist each mother in weighing her child and  plotting the        weight on the growth chart. Help the mother to interpret the  growth        pattern and diagnose the problem, if there is one. Depending on  the result        and a discussion with the mother about causes, refer her to the        appropriate program activities, including health consultation and        supplementary food. Counsel her on one or two activities that she  can do        at home to help her child. Make home visits to children not  growing well        to provide more encouragement to the mother. Organize and  participate in        community meetings to analyze the growth of the community’s  children and        motivate collective action by the community. Help different groups         organize specific activities. Hold group education sessions on  common        problems that mothers face in caring for their children. For some  workers,        managing records, food, cases of diarrhea, or coordinating with  the health        center might be part of the job description.’ (71)
- ‘Supplementary  foods        should be culturally acceptable and should permit the preparation  of meals        which are digestible, palatable, energy dense, and micronutrient  rich,        without being bulky. Other important prerequisites include:        cost-effectiveness in closing the nutrient gaps of recipients;  reliability        of supply; feasibility of transport, storage and processing; short  cooking        time; low fuel costs; and adequate shelf life. The choice of local  versus        external production should be based on such criteria.’ (79)
- ‘Important        nutrition-relevant, complementary actions, aimed at young  children,        include: growth monitoring and promotion; protection and promotion  of        breastfeeding and appropriate complementary feeding practices;        immunization; disease management, including oral rehydration  therapy;        micronutrient supplementation; and deworming.’ (80)
- ‘A breakfast  or morning        snack is generally better than lunch, for alleviating hunger and  achieving        learning objectives.’ (80)
- ‘Deworming can  have a        high payoff for school children. Helminth burdens are most intense  during        the years of schooling.’ (81)
- ‘Iron  supplementation and        deworming have the lowest cost/DALY in school health programs.’  (81)
- ‘The reasons  for dropout        from a supplementation program are more likely to be related to  poor        supply and availability of the tablets than to side-effects.’ (83)
- ‘Supplements  should be        promoted positively as ‘health-promoting’ rather than negatively  as        ‘disease-curing.’ ’ (84)
- ‘It was also  necessary to        pass appropriate legislation to ensure correct levels of salt  iodization,        and to protect iodized salt producers by eliminating noniodized  salt from        the market.’ (86)
- ‘Costs per  death averted        by breastfeeding promotion and IEC are estimated as $100-300 in  the        poorest countries.’ (91)
- ‘Contextual  success        factors: Political commitment at all levels of society was  considered        essential for social mobilization at the start of the program or  project        and for future sustainability. The integration of nutritional  goals in        development programs in general is a clear manifestation of  genuine        awareness and political commitment…A culture where people,  particularly        women, are involved in decision making was a prerequisite for  people’s        participation and the creation of articulate bottom-up demands. A  high        level of literacy, especially among women, also associated  strongly with        participation and organizational capabilities…The parallel  implementation        of poverty-reducing programs, particularly those integrated with        nutrition-oriented program/project.’        (93)
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