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Malnutrition is more than being hungry

By Charlotte Halligan - posted Thursday, 24 September 2009


Look at Meena from a distance and you will see a normal, healthy Lao girl, of average height for a seven-year-old. Look a little bit closer and you will notice that her arms and legs, poking out through her oversized second-hand clothes, are painfully thin. Her hair lacks a healthy shine and her eyes are tired and weary. Meena struggles to concentrate a lot of the time, especially at school. Up close, the affects of malnutrition are all too apparent, especially when you realise that Meena is not seven, but twelve–years-old, and far too short for her age.

The meaning of malnutrition

Malnutrition means different things to different to people. For 40 per cent of children in Laos, it means a constant gnawing hunger in the pit of their stomachs. It means going to school each day without breakfast, unsure whether there will be enough food for lunch. It means depending on rice and what little food you can scavenge for, including insects like crickets and grasshoppers. It means suffering from stunted growth, ill health, increased susceptibility to disease, poor concentration and never meeting your full potential.

For a small but significant percentage of children, malnutrition means not living to see your fifth birthday (Laos has the 23rd highest infant mortality rate in the world - 77 children in every 1,000 die before their fifth birthday). Underweight births, non-existent breast feeding because of maternal malnourishment, and deficiencies in vitamins, iron and iodine, can all cause infant deaths.

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Iodine deficiency in children can also cause mental impairment, with evidence suggesting that it can shave 10 to 15 points off IQ scores, and is the single biggest cause of avoidable mental impairment in the world.

The best form of aid

The Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) of the United Nations reported in 2009 that, despite a decade of economic growth, chronic malnutrition in children remains a huge problem in Laos, and will continue to cause social and economic problems long into the future.

Aside from the immediate, and sometimes devastating, consequences, malnourished children rarely meet their full mental and physical potential as adults, resulting in a loss in productivity that has serious repercussions for economic development. According to FAO research, loss of productivity caused by malnutrition will cost the Lao Peoples Democratic Republic an estimated US$166 million between 2005 and 2010. The problem is self perpetuating - malnourished children and adults are less able to perform the tasks needed to tackle the root causes, such as gain an education, acquire sustainable food sources or generate an income.

Improving nutrition in developing countries is widely believed to be one of the most effective forms of aid and poverty reduction.

Issues intertwined

The reasons for Laos’ problem with food are multiple and complex; many are linked to ongoing poverty - 75 per cent of the population survive on less than $2 a day- increasing environmental degradation, and poor education.

Laos is a landlocked, mountainous and thickly forested country. Its population of just less than six million people is tiny compared to neighbouring Thailand and Vietnam, and yet growing enough food to feed everyone is hugely difficult. Only 4  per cent of the land in Laos is arable; the rest of the country is too mountainous to grow crops successfully.

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What little land is available to farm on is subject to flooding and droughts, pests, and poor irrigation. Disease and land shortages mean that livestock rearing is expensive and difficult. Many farmers lack the technical skills or financial capital needed to improve agricultural techniques and produce sufficient crop yields for their family’s nutritional needs or to sell at local markets.

In very poor households, families depend on foraging for wild food resources, such as fish and aquatic animals, insects, animals, fruits and vegetables. But foraging is an unsustainable way to increase nutrient intake: over harvest, hydro power, foreign investment, logging and tourism are having a detrimental effect on natural resources and increasing the risk of food insecurity for Laos’ most vulnerable people. Foraging in national protected areas also destroys the unique biodiversity in Laos.

A battle fought on many fronts

The Social and Economic Developers Association (SEDA) in Laos is an organisation dedicated to improving the socio-economic situation there, and malnutrition represents the front line. But solving a problem as complex and multifaceted as this is not an easy matter. SEDA recognises that malnutrition is intimately linked to poverty, environmental degradation and poor education; to have any hope of solving malnutrition in the long-term, these inter-related issues must also be addressed.

The first stage of their program is the short term addressing of childhood malnutrition in Laos’ poorest regions in the south of the country. Using donated money, the aim is to provide each child of school age with at least one nutritious meal a day, and one nutritious snack. Just $60 can provide nutrition for one child for a whole month.

At the same time, SEDA is helping villagers to realise long term solutions to poverty and lack of food. Through the innovative use of micro-credit, SEDA will provide farmers with seeds for cash crops, that can be grown quickly, and training in agriculture that will increase crop yields. SEDA is also assisting with irrigation and teaching farmers cutting edge organic farming techniques to address the problems of skill and financial shortages.

The projected increase in food production will help to reduce malnutrition, and surplus crops can be sold at local markets to help generate a small income for farmers.

With financial assistance from international aid institutions, SEDA also plans to provide seedlings for long term, high profit crops, such as grapes, avocados and cherries, which can be sold in urban areas to generate a much higher, sustainable income.

A long term goal

Food insecurity cannot be fixed overnight: it requires long term solutions that not only address the immediate problems, but build capacity within local communities so that they can continue to battle against the causes of malnutrition.

Projects such as SEDA’s will have positive implications long into the future: improved nutrition will contribute to a better education for young people, a more productive adult workforce, and a decline in environmental degradation caused by foraging for food in protected areas.

For Meena and her peers, it can bring hope for a better future, one not defined by poverty, hunger or the struggle to survive.

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For more information, please visit seda-laos.org.



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About the Author

Charlotte Halligan is the PR and Communications Consultant for SEDA Laos.

Other articles by this Author

All articles by Charlotte Halligan

Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

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