Monday, June 11, 2012

Nutrition Takes Center Stage in the Battle Against Non-Communicable Diseases


 United Nations Summit on Non Communicable Diseases as a watershed moment in the battle against malnutrition?
Quite possibly, yes. The fact that the summit took place is an achievement that should not be underestimated. As this blog reported last week, this year represented only the second time in its history that the UN has discussed a health issue at its General Assembly, yet the resulting discourse between the political, non-governmental and business worlds has led to an unprecedented consensus forming around the role nutrition can play in reducing the burden of NCDs and spurring development.
This consensus is built on the understanding that a child’s diet in the first thousand days (between pregnancy and age two) is crucial. Crucial because, with the right kind of nutrition, it is possible to reduce the risk of an NCD, such as diabetes, heart disease, obesity and certain cancers, later in life. Crucial because essential nutrients early in a child's life allow the brain to develop, giving children a chance to grow to their economic and social potential.
These benefits are so acute that the Copenhagen Consensus, the think tank, has calculated that making sure a population has the right kinds of micronutrients could increase a country’s GDP by 2%.  This analysis reinforces that micronutrients are among the most cost-effective interventions a government could make in terms of generating an economic return on investment.
We have known this for some time, which is why we at DSM have been involved in a number of initiatives aimed at making sure some of the world’s most hard-pressed populations have access to adequate nutrition. We underlined this commitment in New York last week, when we launched Future Fortified, a program aimed at delivering food fortification to nutrition black spots in the Nile Delta and elsewhere, along with our partners GAIN and Herbalife.
Future Fortified is just one of a number of ambitious and worthy projects aiming to alleviate nutrition deficiency and improve food security in the developing and developed world. The UN’s Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) program and the 1,000 days campaign, launched last year at the tenth anniversary of the Millennium Development Goals, received wide-scale backing from UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and others last week. We continue to work with our partners in the private and public sectors on other initiatives, including Project Laser Beam, a US$50 million, five-year partnership to tackle child malnutrition.
A second, and perhaps equally critical, consensus also developed in New York last year. This was the acceptance that the private sector can and should play a role in providing the solution. Business must engage in this challenge, together with stakeholders in the public sector. We believe that only through such a cross-fertilization of know-how, innovation, experience and resources, a lasting solution can ever be achieved.
This Rubicon has now been crossed and there now pervades a real belief that, beyond providing short term remedies, the goal of long term, sustainable nutrition security for all is a genuine possibility. These are inspirational times and all of us involved in this quest are united in a commitment that we will not let this opportunity pass.

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