Tag: malnourishment

New Billboard Campaign Challenges Politicians and Businesses to Close the Food Gap

Photo by Gemma on Unsplash

Child hunger and resulting malnutrition is a national emergency so consequential that it should be the number one issue for politicians and businesses ahead of next year’s general elections. Already, one in five South African households don’t have enough food on the table, and times are getting tougher as food prices soar.

This is why public innovator, the DG Murray Trust (DGMT) and Grow Great, a national zero-stunting organisation, have launched a national advocacy campaign, involving over 300 billboards, to demand urgent action to make basic nutritious food more affordable.

The first set of billboards is a picture of a child making his mark at a voting booth with the words ‘I vote for food’. It’s a challenge to every political party to respond to the growing food crisis by ensuring that household food security is a central objective of every election manifesto.

“Our campaign features a series of incisive messages that present child nutrition as a national priority for public health, education and economic growth,” says David Harrison, DGMT’s Chief Executive Officer.

“South Africa has the worst record of household food insecurity compared to middle-income countries of similar per capita GDP. The last national survey, done in 2016, found that 27% of children under the age of five had stunted growth – a proxy for impaired brain development,” Harrison explains.

The relationship between malnutrition and low education outcomes is highlighted in the second set of billboards of a uniformed schoolboy conveying a lesson to a group of adults with the words ‘if I grow well, I learn well’ written on a chalkboard. This message makes the point that without good nutrition our children’s bodies and brains are deprived of the fuel they need to grow and develop.

Stunted children are more likely to drop out of school, struggle to find employment and live in poverty as adults. The consequence is successive generations of children unable to reach their full potential.

The third set of billboards show a girl confidently seated on an office desk overlooking a cityscape with the message ‘good nutrition today is good for business tomorrow’.“

According to the World Bank, high stunting rates are one of the main reasons for South Africa’s dismal economic growth because our country doesn’t have a sufficient human capital pipeline to drive productivity. But if we ensured that all children had enough food, our long-term economic prospects would be radically different,” says Harrison.

These billboards also aim to build public support for a bold new proposal championed by DGMT and Grow Great earlier this year – a proposal that requires food producers, retailers and the government to work together to reduce the cost of 10 nutritious foods by at least 30%.

These items are eggs, dried beans and lentils, tinned fish, fortified maize meal, peanut butter, rice, amasi, soya mince, 4-in-1 soup mix, and powdered full cream milk – many are already staple pantry items in South African households.

What’s in the proposal?

The proposal involves food manufacturers and retailers agreeing to waive the mark-ups of at least one product label of each of the ‘10 best buys’. Government would then show its support by agreeing to provide a rebate to retailers and manufacturers.

A fourth set of billboards acknowledges that times are tough and invites parents and caregivers to contact Grow Great to learn more about the 10 best buys.

“Civil society organisations can do their part by raising awareness about the 10 best buys and sharing the resources and information we’ve made available on our platforms, like our WhatsApp number 060 073 3333,” says Dr Edzani Mphaphuli, Grow Great executive director.

Good nutrition cannot only be the responsibility of the Department of Health, Mphaphuli adds. “Given what we know about the consequence of child malnutrition on households and the economy, we need the whole of society to mobilise to turn things around.”

“We call on the government, food producers, wholesalers and retailers to stand in solidarity with South African families to close the food gap,” she concludes.

Report Finds One in Four Preschool Children in SA Malnourished

Photo by Gautam Arora on Unsplash

One in four preschool children (aged four to five years) shows signs of long-term malnutrition, according to a new survey.

The Thrive by Five Index, released on 8 April, was produced by First National Bank and Innovation Edge in collaboration with the Department of Basic Education (DBE). The study surveyed more than 5000 children enrolled in early learning programmes across the country.

The study found about 25% of children were physically stunted, as a result of malnutrition in pregnancy and the early years of life. About 65% of children are either cognitively delayed, physically stunted, or both. This means they are not meeting the learning or growth standards expected of a child their age, and will start school at a disadvantage.

“Children from poorer households tended to perform worse,” said Sonja Giese, the lead researcher in the study. Giese is the founder of Innovation Edge, which was set up to support innovation in early childhood development. The rates of stunting were highest among the poorest children.

She said each child was assessed for about an hour. Children were assessed for things such as early mathematical skills, literacy and communication, motor development and coordination, among other things.

But Giese also drew attention to the positive outcomes of the study, saying that even within the poorest group of children there were some children who performed very well, causing a kind of “positive deviance”.

“I think there are some really interesting lessons we can learn from these outliers …Some children just thrive in difficult circumstances,” said Giese. She said more research could help to figure out how and why these children are thriving.

Giese said as the DBE had just taken over responsibility for early childhood education from the Department of Social Development, the study could show where attention should be focused.

In a statement about the survey, the DBE said that the first five years of the child’s life are the most important and stressed the importance of physical development during this stage.

Data for the survey was collected in late 2021 from a nationally representative sample of children aged 50-59 months enrolled in early learning programmes. The final weighted sample used for analysis included 5,139 children from 1,247 programmes across the country. The school quintile system was used to measure the probable socio-economic background of the children who were assessed. School quintiles are based on the income, education and unemployment levels of households in the school catchment area and for the purposes of the Thrive by Five study, the researchers assumed that the income level of children attending early learning programmes within each school cluster matched the income level of children attending the nearest school.

The researchers included more children from quintile 1 – the poorest – in order for the study to be representative of the country and each province. “That’s how we tried to make sure that it really provides a window into the world of children today in South Africa, exactly where they are and how they’re living,” said Giese.

Giese said that some of the data had not yet been analysed and further findings would be released over the next year.

This story was written by Liezl Human for GroundUp and is reproduced under a Creative Commons 4.0 Licence.

Source: GroundUp