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Better
Nutrition Could Save Millions of Kids
Malnutrition is to blame for more than half of all the deaths
of children around the world -- including deaths caused by diarrhea,
pneumonia, malaria and measles, researchers said.
Poor nourishment leaves children
underweight and weakened and vulnerable to infections that do
not have to be fatal, the team at the World Health Organization
and Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore found.
They estimated that feeding all
children worldwide an adequate diet would prevent about 1 million
deaths a year from pneumonia, 800,000 from diarrhea, 500,000 from
malaria, and 250,000 from measles.
"Malnutrition does not have to
be severe to have a significant impact on child health and survival,"
said Laura Caulfield, an associate professor with the Bloomberg
School's Center for Human Nutrition who led the study.
"Our analysis shows that even children
who were small, but whose weight would not classify them as malnourished,
were twice as likely to die as children in our reference group."
Her group analyzed the data from
10 studies of childhood deaths around the world, and used complex
formulas to extrapolate the effect of weight on the likelihood
of death.
They estimate that 52.5 percent
of all deaths in young children were attributable to undernourishment,
with nearly 45 percent of measles deaths and more than 60 percent
of deaths from diarrhea associated with low weight and poor nutrition.
"These findings underscore the
need to make the improvement of the nutritional status of children
a priority," they wrote in their study, published in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Reference
Source 89
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