Food & Nutrition
Food & Nutrition
An in-depth exploration of nutritional profiles, public health problems, assessment methods, and food safety protocols.
7.1 Nutritional Profiles: National and Lumbini Province
A nutritional profile is a comprehensive summary of the food intake, dietary habits, and overall nutritional status of a population. In Nepal, data is heavily drawn from the Nepal Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS) and Multi-sectoral Nutrition Plans (MSNP), highlighting disparities between national averages and provincial specifics like Lumbini.
| Indicator (Children <5 yrs) | Nepal Average | Lumbini Province |
|---|---|---|
| Stunting (Chronic Malnutrition) | ~ 25% | ~ 25.3% |
| Wasting (Acute Malnutrition) | ~ 8% | ~ 10.1% |
| Underweight | ~ 19% | ~ 21% |
| Anemia in Women (15-49 yrs) | ~ 34% | ~ 42.6% |
| Exclusive Breastfeeding (<6 mo) | ~ 56% | ~ 51% |
50 Key Points on Nutritional Profiles
7.2 Nutritional Problems: National & Lumbini
Nutritional problems range from severe undernutrition (macronutrient deficiencies) to micronutrient deficiencies (hidden hunger), and increasingly, the crisis of overnutrition leading to chronic diseases. Nepal and Lumbini face the “Double Burden of Malnutrition.”
Undernutrition
- Stunting: Low height-for-age. Caused by chronic long-term malnutrition. Irreversible after age 2.
- Wasting: Low weight-for-height. Indicates severe, acute weight loss or starvation.
- Underweight: Low weight-for-age. A composite indicator of stunting and wasting.
- Micronutrient Deficiency: “Hidden Hunger” (Iron, Iodine, Vitamin A, Zinc).
Overnutrition
- Overweight/Obesity: Excessive fat accumulation presenting health risks. High BMI.
- Diet-related NCDs: Type 2 Diabetes, hypertension, cardiovascular diseases.
- Causes: Shift toward ultra-processed foods, high sugar/fat intake, and sedentary urban lifestyles.
- Paradox: Obese individuals can simultaneously suffer from micronutrient deficiencies.
50 Key Points on Nutritional Problems
7.3 Assessment of Nutritional Status
Assessing nutritional status is vital to identify malnutrition, track progress, and evaluate interventions. The universally accepted framework for direct assessment is the ABCD method: Anthropometric, Biochemical, Clinical, and Dietary methods.
The ABCD Methods of Nutritional Assessment
50 Key Points on Assessment Methods
7.4 Toxins, Additives & Fortification
Modern food systems involve complex interactions. Food toxication involves harmful contaminants, additives are intentional chemical inclusions to enhance food, and fortification is a public health strategy to deliberately increase micronutrients in foods.
Food Toxins
Harmful substances naturally present, produced by microbes, or environmental contaminants. Cause acute or chronic illness.
Food Additives
Chemicals intentionally added to preserve flavor, improve taste, appearance, or extend shelf-life (e.g., MSG, colors).
Food Fortification
Public health intervention deliberately adding essential vitamins/minerals to staple foods to combat deficiencies.
50 Key Points on Toxins, Additives & Fortification
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