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19 Percent Of Children Under The Age Of 5 In Armenia Suffer From Stu

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  • 19 Percent Of Children Under The Age Of 5 In Armenia Suffer From Stu

    19 PERCENT OF CHILDREN UNDER THE AGE OF 5 IN ARMENIA SUFFER FROM STUNTED GROWTH

    12:46, May 7, 2013

    A four-day sub-regional workshop addressing the problem of stunting
    among children under the age of five in Albania, Armenia and Georgia
    started today in Yerevan.

    Co-hosted by the Government of Armenia and UNICEF, the workshop brings
    together stakeholders in the area of child nutrition from the three
    countries to review national strategies and programmes, highlight
    existing systemic gaps and re-energize the national commitment to
    child rights and welfare.

    "Health and nutrition are priority issues to ensure children's
    well-being, and in that sense early years are very critical because
    the risk of childhood diseases and mortality is quite high during
    the first years of life," Deputy Minister of Health of Armenia Sergey
    Khachatryan said in his opening remarks.

    A new UNICEF Report Improving Child Nutrition: The achievable
    imperative for global progress released last month offers evidence
    that globally 165 million children under the age of five are suffering
    from stunting or are too short for their age.

    The Report also confirms that a key to success against stunting is
    focusing attention on pregnancy and the first two years of a child's
    life. Stunting in a child is not only about being too short for his
    or her age. It can also mean suffering from stunted development of
    the brain, cognitive and learning capacity in childhood, as well as
    work productivity in adulthood.

    Stunting in children under 5 years of age is a marker of lost
    opportunity for a child's brain to develop to its full potential:
    this is a critical period of brain development, when the consequences
    of poor nutrition, reflected in low height for age, have irreversible
    impact and cannot be corrected later in life.

    "If a woman is malnourished during pregnancy, or if her child is
    malnourished during the first two years of life, the child's physical
    and mental growth and development may be slowed. That child will never
    learn, nor earn later in life, as much as she or he could have if
    properly nourished in early life," UNICEF Representative in Armenia
    Henriette Ahrens said.

    According to the recent data from the three countries, 19 per cent
    of children under the age of five in Armenia, 16 per cent in Albania
    and 11 per cent in Georgia suffer from stunted growth.

    WHO international growth standards indicate that young children (under
    the age of five) worldwide have the same capacity to reach their
    height potential when pregnant women receive appropriate attention
    for health and nutrition during pregnancy, and the children benefit
    from optimal feeding practices and receive appropriate care. At
    the same time, country-level statistics clearly shows that the most
    disadvantaged children have much higher rates of stunting, indicating
    that stunting in early childhood is a key marker of inequity and not
    of genetic predisposition.

    Stunting and other forms of undernutrition can be reduced through
    a series of simple and proven steps during pregnancy and the first
    two years of a child's life, globally referred to as "the first 1000
    days of life". Proper nutritional interventions during these 1000
    days are critical in improving fetal and child nutrition, growth,
    and brain development. They provide an opportunity which does not
    exist later in life: the reason why this period is also called "a
    window of opportunity".

    "We need to act during this critical time to ensure full growth and
    development of children. Effective interventions applied worldwide
    include improving pregnant women's nutrition and care as well as
    prevention of childhood illnesses and appropriate feeding practices
    during the first two years of life. Exclusive breastfeeding for
    the first six months continued afterwards along with appropriate
    complementary feeding with nutrient-rich foods and vitamin/mineral
    supplements is the key to success, " Nune Mangasaryan, Senior Advisor
    on Nutrition from UNICEF Headquarters in New York, emphasized.

    Very often the poor nutrition is a result of lack of knowledge on
    appropriate nutrition and care. It is equally important to work
    on improvement of parenting skills since parents bear primary
    responsibility for their children's well-being. Integrated support
    to families especially those living in vulnerable communities should,
    therefore, be the backbone of governmental programmes, in addition to
    legislative and administrative interventions. In many cases, simple
    information on maternal nutrition and child feeding and care can
    play a crucial role in ensuring appropriate fetal and child growth
    and development.

    The sub-regional workshop will provide a ground for development of
    long-term national action plans to reduce stunting among children
    under the age of five in Albania, Armenia, and Georgia as well as
    will agree on practical steps to be undertaken in the immediate future.

    http://hetq.am/eng/news/26292/19-percent-of-children-under-the-age-of-5-in-armenia-suffer-from-stunted-growth.html

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