Farming For Balanced Nutrition: An Agricultural Approach To Addressing Micronutrient Deficiency Among The Vulnerable Poor In Africa
Concepts on malnutrition have evolved from an emphasis on protein deficiency through energy deficit, to the realization that food quality in general and an adequate supply of micronutrients in particular, is often more of a problem than food quantity. Throughout the developing world, micronutrient d...
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Veröffentlicht in: | African journal of food, agriculture, nutrition, and development : AJFAND agriculture, nutrition, and development : AJFAND, 2011-03, Vol.11 (2), p.4688 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Concepts on malnutrition have evolved from an emphasis on protein
deficiency through energy deficit, to the realization that food quality
in general and an adequate supply of micronutrients in particular, is
often more of a problem than food quantity. Throughout the developing
world, micronutrient deficiency is one of the most important factors
influencing human health, being directly responsible for conditions
such as xeropthalmia, associated with vitamin A deficiency and anaemia,
due to iron deficiency. In addition, micronutrient deficiency
predisposes children to infection and retards recovery from common
infections such as malaria, measles and diarrhoea. The groups most at
risk from micronutrient deficiency are usually children and those for
whom labour for food production is limited by ill health (HIV
sufferers), advanced age or intense social commitments (single mothers,
for example). There have been numerous health projects in sub-Saharan
Africa and elsewhere in the developing world, to address micronutrient
deficiency through the distribution of vitamin and mineral supplements,
which usually have to be imported. An alternative (or complementary)
approach is to promote the inclusion of high quality food crops in the
farming system to enrich the diet with essential vitamins and minerals.
This agricultural approach to the problem of micronutrient deficiency
can provide sustainable solutions, which improve diet quality. An
increase in the cultivation of high quality foods such as legumes,
fruits and green vegetables, may be able to deliver a balanced diet to
households, without necessarily requiring additional land and labour.
Agricultural approaches to enhance dietary intake of vitamins and
minerals have the additional advantage that they foster community
self-reliance, they are sustainable in the absence of external funding,
and, offer the opportunity for enhanced income by marketing surplus
production. Diet diversification through better use of existing
biodiversity offers an immediate means to address poor diet quality and
can also include the use of presently available nutritionally enhanced
crops, such as orange-fleshed sweet potato. |
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ISSN: | 1684-5358 1684-5358 1684-5374 |
DOI: | 10.4314/ajfand.v11i2.65922 |