Archive for the ‘Campaign News’ Category

Support urgently needed for children in Sudan

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

Being aware of the crises in Pakistan and China and doing what we can help ourselves with donations, the Foundation wishes to draw attention to an unsung tragedy in the Sudan.

However, the research of our students highlights the critical importance of the young women, pregnant and breast feeding mothers. It is not just any food that is needed but food that contains the nutrients specifically needed by the mother to secure her health and that of her unborn child.
Josette Shaaron, the Executive Director of the World Food Program, in her opening remarks to the Executive Board in June re-iterated our mission as follows
“We know now that if children under two do not receive sufficient nutrition they will be sentenced to a lifetime of mental and physical limitations. We now have what I call the burden of knowledge and WFP is looking for ways to ensure we prioritize those under twos, the most vulnerable of all in the world, during emergencies.

http://documents.wfp.org/stellent/groups/public/documents/newsroom/wfp221014.pdf

No mother deliberately malnourishes her child, and malnourishment of the under 2 means malnourishment of the mother which certainly will have stunted brain development irreversibly. So children grow up unable to hold attention at school; unable to learn properly, often with chronic ill health all of which leads to a high rate of mortality, and for those that survive an inability to invent, be creative or hold a job. The net effect is the cementing of poverty. Our Sudanese students desperately need support to find the best ways to provide for safe maternal nutrition and health. This is the surest way to solve poverty.

House of Lords Seminar on Brain Development

Sunday, July 11th, 2010

Lord Hameed held a Seminar at the House of Lords on 14th June to raise awareness about cerebral palsy and allied disorders of brain development. Lord Hameed is the President of the Little Foundation, a sister charity that is specifically concerned with research on the cause and prevention of cerebral palsy and the allied disorders.

He spoke eloquently of the lack of interest on prevention by the research councils and NHS research arm which Sir David Cooksey described in his report to the Treasury that only 2% of the total research budget was spent on research into prevention. The reason for his report was to recommend ways of stemming the rising costs of the NHS.

The Little Foundation initiated a multi-centre study across the Europe using magnetic resonance imaging to assess the origin of the brain damage. The result demonstrated that in the majority of cases the lesions could be identified as happening well before the birth date. That means they were not due to obstetric mishap. As Professor Polani’s research could not identify any genetic cause, the cause had to be associated with fetal nutritional and or infectious problems.

If this government wishes to save money prevention is the way to do it. Cerebral palsy costs the UK about £4 billion a year: a cost that is disproportionately high because of its life long impact. The incidence has not changed over the last several decades but there has been a marked and sinister rise in mental ill health. The DoH calculated the cost of mental
ill health in the UK was £77 billion in 2007, greater than the cost of heart disease and cancer combined.

Lord Hameed was followed by Professor Mark Johnson and Dr Enitan Ogundipe of Imperial College who outlined the problems associated with low birthweight and prematurity. Professor Johnson described the very high prevalence of
cerebral palsy on preterm and very low birthweight infants as a major clue as to discovering the cause which could lead to prevention. He referred to poor maternal/fetal nutrition leading to chronic diseases in later life. He identified the brain specific fatty acid docosahexaenoic acid a deficiency of which in the modern food system was as a potential culprit. It is both required for brain structure and function and is also anti-inflammatory and anti-thrombus. Dr. Ogundipe then discussed the issue as they affect the development of the children which apart from the extreme of 24 hour nursing care include physical disabilities, behavioral disorders, attention deficit disorders, poor learning in school which leads to poor achievement in life. Lord Hameed had pointed out that this cluster of poor abilities leads to the cyclical cementing of poverty. Cerebral palsy is the tip of an iceberg. Professor Michael Crawford ended by re-iterating the gravity of the rise in brain disorders and mental ill health and suggested that last century food policy had mistakenly focused on protein and calories and body growth. However, there are different principles for the growth of the brain and the body as the material of the brain is largely fat which is especially rich in brain specific essential fatty acids. Our species is characterized by the brain not the body. There needs to be a new paradigm for food policy which prioritizes the needs of the brain. He suggested ways this could be done.

The presentations were followed by an hour long discussion of the issues raised and what needs to be done. Further information from Professor Crawford.

Major deficiencies in artificial feeding, inquiry finds

Monday, June 28th, 2010

[A Study group is] calling for greater consensus among neonatologists about best practice for pre-term babies after uncovering a “lottery” in the way in which infants were treated.

Out of the 264 cases reviewed, there were delays in recognising the need for artificial feeding in a third of cases, and further delays in starting treatment once a decision has been taken.

In nearly 40% of cases, the first feeding provided was considered inadequate for the baby’s need. Complications, it found, were avoidable in a fifth of the babies treated.

via BBC News

G8 pledge comes up short. Surprised?

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Five years ago, the G8 leaders shook hands with superstars such as Bono and Bob Geldof as they pledged $50 billion in aid to developing countries. At the 2010 deadline, they came up $19.5 billion short. That’s the real scandal of the G8.

Maybe the security price-tag and the disruption to daily lives in Toronto would be worthwhile if the G8 and G20 actually delivered on commitments.

(Then again, maybe if the leaders followed through, the protests and security bill would be smaller.)

Unfortunately, it’s security that shows up on balance sheets -not broken promises. Lack of accountability means commitments are usually forgotten soon after the Summits close.

via Vancouver Sun

Why is it that you need to eat more fish?

Sunday, June 27th, 2010

Martin Bowerman has just got back to Australia after coming to our Celebration of DHA at the Royal Society of Medicine.

Here is is talking to ABC Queensland about the importance of seafood in the diet.

ABC Queensland

Bangladesh: 77m poisoned by arsenic in drinking water

Sunday, June 20th, 2010

Up to 77 million people in Bangladesh have been exposed to toxic levels of arsenic from drinking water in recent decades, according to a Lancet study.

The research assessed nearly 12,000 people in a district of the capital Dhaka for over a period of 10 years.

More than 20% of deaths among those assessed were caused by the naturally occurring poisonous element, it found.

via BBC News

Mother and Child Foundation Calls on Parties to Support A New Way to Nutrition and Health.

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

The Mother and Child Foundation calls upon the leaders of political parties, and on candidates for both national and local government to declare their support for the Foundation’s campaign for better nutrition for expectant and nursing mothers, and for their dependant children.

The evidence is now accepted that poor nutrition during pregnancy causes life-long damage to the unborn child. Lack of key nutrients cripples brain development at the root; at its most extreme (which is becoming distressingly common) causing conditions like Cerebral Palsy, and even in milder forms destroying learning potential, and condemning a generation to lives of poverty.

The removal of Home Economics and Nutrition from the standard curriculum in the early 1970s set a time bomb ticking in the heart of our communities, and we now have a generation who, despite token efforts of cookery lessons, and despite the odd highly publicised campaign in politically well placed schools, cannot plan a balanced diet. We have an underclass, given a pittance barely enough to survive, who cannot afford good food, and do not know how to make the most of what they can afford.

The result is now falling around our ears – a generation of parents living on refined starch and fats, simultaneously growing obese whilst their bodies fail them through malnutrition. We have ever higher rates of metabolic disorders such as diabetes. We have massive and increasing rates of poor mental health. We have rates of seriously underweight babies which are an international disgrace, comparable only with the Balkan states recovering from civil war. We have a mental health system barely able to cope with those in extremis, and without the resources to help them before they reach that point.

And we have more of the same to come, with the next generation of that underclass being fed on what their parents can afford to fill their bellies, without the knowledge or the money to give them the nutrients which they need. Children who start out handicapped by poor nutrition, who will grow to become adults who need support just to function, let alone become productive members of society.

We need to address the problem where it begins. A recent study in London found that nearly three quarters of the mothers studied were significantly deficient in vitamin D. Many were suffering with anaemia, due to lack of iron and B vitamins. All of these affect their babies, with anaemia being particularly damaging to the brain.

Numerous trials (for example those recently reported in Cardiff, and the East End of London) show that measures as simple as providing pregnant and nursing mothers with free vitamins can produce benefits for their children, and through developing their potential, the nation.

We need nationally set programmes and standards for the teaching of Nutrition and Home Economics, so that children are empowered to make decisions that will affect their own life, health and that of their children. We must invest in prevention, which is the surest way to save costs of the Health Service. Yet only 2% of the total budget for research by the MRC and NHS is spent on preventive research. The old maxim says “a stitch in time saves nine”: as a nation, we need to invest in health which means prevention as a priority. That will save ten times the cost in mental and other ill health issues, and the social costs linked to chronic ill health, especially mental ill health.

The old way are health costs spiralling upwards to try to serve more and more chronic disease, obesity and mental ill health. Let’s have new way ! It is time for a paradigm shift that will save money and enhance the health, intelligence and productive capacity of the nation.

We need to start with the mother and child. We need nutrition, and we need education: empower children. Who is with us?

Funding sought for spin-off research and marketing company

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

All good things come to an end, and  Phil Culmer – our research & publicity assistant, responsible for the new site – has reached the end of his paid internship with us, which was courtesy of the Vodafone Foundation, and their World of Difference programme.

He’s going to keep on doing what he can on a voluntary basis, but we’d like to do more than that – we’ve found that there’s a real benefit to having someone working on this full time, and full time staff need to be paid.

What we’d like to do, therefore, is set up a company in Lincoln (where Phil is based) to do this for us – and maybe in the future for others.

We need up front capital to set the office up, and ongoing funds to run the office and pay Phil some wages. Phil’s set up a page at JustGiving.com with details of our targets for this, so why not have a look?