Sunday, 24 November 2024

South Africa needs to change direction on maternal health to solve child malnutrition

 

Children are eating too much poor nutrient quality food and too little of good nutrient quality food. Shutterstock

Chantell Witten, University of the Free State and Shane Norris, University of the Witwatersrand

When we think about nurturing healthy children, we need to adopt a life course approach to maternal nutrition. In other words, a women’s health for the benefit of herself and her child must be prioritised early in life.

We know that poor nutrition during pregnancy and infancy has long-term consequences for that generation of infants – malnourished mothers, birth malnourished infants. Health and nutrition during this critical window has far-reaching consequences and casts a long shadow of the increased risk of ill-health such as diabetes, hypertension and cardio-vascular disease.

At a public health level, good health, mainly through good nutrition, contributes to the economic productivity and development of society by decreasing the costs of ill-health and ensuring a good healthy workforce.

So how healthy are South Africa’s children?

South Africa is classified as a middle-income country and has high per capita spending on health. Yet the nutritional status of South Africa’s children is deteriorating. While the number of children going hungry has reportedly decreased, access to energy-dense but low micronutrient-dense food is fuelling an increase in child overweight and obesity.

In 2018, 11% of children (2.1 million) lived in households that reported child hunger. More than a quarter (27%) of children in South Africa are stunted – the most common manifestation of malnutrition.

Children are eating too much poor nutrient quality food and too little of good nutrient quality food. This profile illustrates the concept of hidden hunger or poor nutrition-security and the demonstrates the insidious corruption that malnutrition meets out on children’s health and lives, now and into their futures.

If the country wants to change this, it needs to implement health and nutrition policies in girlhood and in the teen years.

Our paper, written for an annual status report on South Africa’s children produced by the Children’s Institute at the University of Cape Town, argues that a child-centric food systems would reap benefits for society and for future generations. This food system would need to focus on food security and good nutrition. It would require multisectoral changes to the food system as well as the way in which healthcare services work.

The risks and mitigation strategies

Women who are either overweight or obese before conceiving a child or gain excessive weight during pregnancy are more likely to develop gestational diabetes. These women are also at higher risk of developing diabetes after childbirth. And babies born to women who are obese are more likely to be born large for their age and are at higher risk of being an obese child.

The mother’s weight isn’t the only potential risk to a child. When pregnant women experience nutrient deficiencies, it also affects the baby. For example, iron deficiency in pregnancy has negative effects on the development of the foetus’s brain.

Nutrient deficiencies also contribute to the high incidence of noncommunicable diseases in low- and middle-income countries.

The International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics has set out some helpful guidelines for policy makers. These call for:

  • Increased awareness of the impact of women’s nutrition on their health and the health of future generations.

  • Greater attention to the links between poor maternal nutrition and increased risk of later non-communicable diseases in the offspring as a core component of meeting global health goals.

  • Action to improve nutrition among adolescent girls and women of reproductive age.

  • Public health measures to improve nutritional education, particularly for adolescents, girls and young women.

  • Greater access to preconception services for women of reproductive age to assist with planning and preparation for healthy pregnancies and healthy children.

In addition, we argue that the government needs to adopt a comprehensive package of interventions that extends social assistance to pregnant women to improve their nutrition and mental health, and the health, care and development of their children. For example, the child support grant could start in pregnancy.

This package of interventions could prioritise food and nutrition at every point of contact for a mother and her infant.

South African policy is moving forward long these lines but policies need to be accelerated.


Read more: We tracked Soweto mothers-to-be to find out more about diet and obesity patterns


The interventions would be delivered beyond health and would require a multisectoral approach to ensure the optimal health and development of children from birth to age two years or older. This would also need to include early child development programmes which have seen a steady increase in utilisation over the past few years.

Healthy growing children are not only a moral and legal obligation but children remain a sustainable investment into a country’s future. To achieve this South Africa can draw lessons from other countries such as Brazil, Rwanda and Bangladesh. All have prioritised child nutrition and have reduced childhood stunting. Healthier children are healthier parents.

These countries have prioritised child nutrition by investing in general public nutrition literacy campaigns and have enforced legislation to protect children from the marketing of unhealthy foods. They have also ensured the scale up and implementation of a proven set of evidenced based interventions like maternity protection, promotion and protection of breastfeeding and the promotion and support for affordable localised diversified diets.The Conversation

Chantell Witten, Lecturer, University of the Free State and Shane Norris, Director, DSI-NRF Centre of Excellence in Human Development, University of the Witwatersrand

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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