GHS CHARGED JOURNALISTS TO JOIN FIGHT AGAINST MALNUTRITION
Mrs. Kate Quarshie, Acting Head of Nutrition, Ghana
Health Service has advised Journalists
and media practitioners to support the
efforts of health institutions in the
country towards the fight against
undernutrition which is a significant contributor to poor health.
She said the media has a major role to play in sensitizing
the general public on health issues and charged Journalists to use the power at
their disposal to educate the public on how to deal with malnutrition which has
become a burden to Ghanaians.
She equally called for a strong advocacy support on
part of the private sector and other stakeholders to help scale up nutrition
interventions and offer support for social behavior change activities on
nutrition stressing that championing nutrition will result in further gains in
economic growth, education and health in the country.
Mrs. Quarshie made this observation when addressing
a group of Journalists at a one-day media Practitioners Capacity Building
workshop on nutrition organized by the Ghana Coalition of Civil Society
Organizations for Scaling up Nutrition (GHACCSSUN)
in Accra last Wednesday.
“One in every
thirteen Ghanaian children dies before his or her fifth birthday whiles more
than half of those deaths are associated with undernutrition, moreover undernourished
children are more likely to die of illnesses, including malaria, diarrhoea,
pneumonia and complications from HIV and AIDS, than children who are not
undernourished” said Mrs Kate Quarshie.
Adding that 1
in 48 women in Ghana is at risk of dying from causes related to pregnancy or
child birth which 1 in 5 of those deaths
is related to iron deficiency anaemia.
She identified major
nutritional problems in Ghana as undernutrition which results to stunting, wasting,
and micronutrient deficiency coupled with over nutrition and associated
diet-related diseases which she described as double- burden of malnutrition.
She revealed
Ghana’s statistic in terms as prevalent rate for malnutrition for the year 2003
as 35% whiles 28% in
2008, but in 2011 reduced to 23% which she noted though the figures show a
gradual reduction the most recent figure indicates that more than 1 out of 5
children are too short for their age describing it as unfortunate.
According to her, research has shown that despite
all these challenges faced by the country; however there is still hope because
undernutrition is preventable envisaging that in the next ten years to come, investment in proven
effective nutrition interventions would
save 30,000 lives by preventing underweight,
save the lives of
more than 25,000 children
by decreasing vitamin A deficiency and prevents permanent brain damage in
500,000 children by decreasing iodine deficiency.
“Promotion of
optimal breastfeeding, appropriate complementary feeding, improved hygienic
practices,
Vitamin A supplementation, de-worming, and Iron-folate supplements for pregnant and lactating
women, salt iodisation, fortification of staple foods, multiple micronutrient
powders and treatment of severe acute malnutrition† with special foods, such as
ready-to-use therapeutic foods are proven effective nutrition interventions” she
suggested.
“These
interventions are being implemented but not at scale. They need to be scaled up
across the length and breadth of the country.” Mrs. Quarshie stressed.
While
congratulating the Ghana Coalition of Civil Society
Organizations for Scaling up Nutrition (GHACCSSUN)
for a good job done in building the capacity of Journalists in nutrition
reporting for the second time, she lamented on Journalists lack of knowledge in
reporting issues pertaining to malnutrition; urging them to make judicious use
of the opportunity offered to turn things around for the better.
She
was optimistic that the Ghana’s malnutrition situation will change if the media
and the private sector assist the Ghana Health Service and other health institutions
in the country by playing a key role in educating the public as a way of
contributing their quota to the fight against malnutrition.
The 2nd Media Practitioners Capacity
Building workshop on nutrition was aimed at equipping the Journalists with
deeper knowledge and skills in dealing with and covering key aspects of
nutrition and its multifaceted impact on Ghanaians.
It also seeks to produce a cadre of mass media
personnel who are sensitive to nutrition challenges that confront Ghanaians and
equally intended to kick start a network of nutrition reporters that can work
with GHACCSSUN and government to push nutrition agenda forward.
GHACCSSUN envisages a future where all citizens of
Ghana have access to quality and nutritious food for a productive and
prosperous society.
END
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