Archive for the ‘Nutrition’ 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.

Pregnant women ‘must take vitamin D supplements’

Sunday, July 4th, 2010

Pregnant women in the UK should be told to routinely take vitamin D supplements, researchers say.

The team at University College London Institute of Child Health says official bodies currently offer conflicting advice.

Writing in the British Journal of Nutrition, they say there is a “strong case” for a daily dose of vitamin D in pregnancy.

via BBC News

Vitamin D deficiency in pregnant Arab women requires urgent attention, says doctor

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

Pregnant Arab women have an “extraordinarily high prevalence” of vitamin D deficiency — a potential health issue for them and their babies, according to a new Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center study.

The vitamin deficiency is largely due to how Arab women dress outdoors — preventing exposure of the skin to sunlight and subsequent vitamin D intake, according to Adekunle Dawodu, M.D., a physician in the Center for Global Child Health at Cincinnati Children’s and lead author of the study.

via Science Daily. Thanks to levelsofillusion for pointing out this article to me.

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

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

Breast Milk Reduces Infections

Saturday, June 26th, 2010

Breast-feeding seems to provide an immune system boost to infants, helping to prevent respiratory and gastrointestinal illnesses in babies, according to new research.

Babies who were breast-fed exclusively for four months, and then partially until they were six months old, had a reduced risk of respiratory and gastrointestinal infections compared to babies who had never been breast-fed, the Dutch team found.

via Health24

Scottish government agrees breast is best.

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

In Written Answers, Shona Robison (SNP) said,

There is a large and robust body of evidence demonstrating the short and long term health benefits of breastfeeding for both mothers and infants, including evidence from the World Health Organization, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD and the World Cancer Research Fund.

The Scottish Government has adopted as policy the World Health Organization guidance recommending exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months of an infant’s life.

via TheyWorkForYou

Kingston Hospital asks mothers to replenish milk bank

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

A hospital in south-west London is calling on new mothers to help replenish its near-empty milk bank.

The neo-natal unit at Kingston Hospital is close to full capacity but has a shortage of milk.

via BBC News

Vitamin D for Mom May Lower Baby’s MS Risk

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Pregnant women who drink plenty of milk may be protecting their child from developing multiple sclerosis (MS) in the future.

MS is a nervous system disease that attacks the material, called myelin, that covers nerve fibers. This disrupts signaling between nerves and causes nerve damage, leading to symptoms such as numbness, tingling, fatigue, loss of vision, and possibly, paralysis. The disease most often strikes adults after age 20, but it can develop in children.

Growing evidence has suggested that vitamin D, found in fortified milk, may lower one’s risk of MS. Now, researchers with the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston have shown that it’s possible this protective benefit could begin while a baby is developing in the womb.

via WebMD

Vitamin C No Help for Preeclampsia

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Taking high doses of vitamins C and E does not protect against a common and potentially fatal high blood pressure disorder during pregnancy, a large, government study confirms.

More than 10,000 pregnant women took part in the National Institutes of Health-funded trial, designed to determine if average-risk women could lower their risk of developing preeclampsia by taking vitamin C and E supplements starting early in pregnancy.

Several small studies reported in the 1990s suggested a role for vitamin C and E in the prevention of preeclampsia and other pregnancy-related high blood pressure disorders, but the large trial failed to show any benefit.

via WebMD.