Making food systems work for complementary feeding in low- and middle-income countries: Meeting Report

Food systems currently are not meeting the needs of children in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). across the globe. In these countries, two in three children between the ages of 6 and 23 months lack the diverse diets they need for healthy growth, development, and future economic success. Nut...

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Autor principal: Micronutrient Forum
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Micronutrient Forum 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139724
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author Micronutrient Forum
author_browse Micronutrient Forum
author_facet Micronutrient Forum
author_sort Micronutrient Forum
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Food systems currently are not meeting the needs of children in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). across the globe. In these countries, two in three children between the ages of 6 and 23 months lack the diverse diets they need for healthy growth, development, and future economic success. Nutrient requirements of children in this age group are high due to rapid growth and development while the quantities of food they can consume to meet these requirements is small, highlighting the need for locally grown nutrient-dense foods and in contexts where these are not available, fortified complementary foods. Low availability and unaffordability of diverse foods appropriate for young children limit access to a nutritious diet. Bold actions are needed to ensure that food systems and more particularly, agricultural production, food supply chains, and food environments sustainably provide healthier and more nutritious diets for this vulnerable age group. On behalf of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the Micronutrient Forum (the “Forum”) and USAID Advancing Nutrition organized an expert consultation on December 4–5, 2023 on food system approaches to discuss strategies to increase the availability, affordability, accessibility, and aspirational aspects of nutritious and safe foods appropriate for complementary feeding that can be purchased by low-income households. The 43 participants’ expertise covered nutrition, food systems from local to global levels, policy and business expertise and represented research, bilateral, technical, and implementing organizations, United Nations agencies, and the private sector.
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spelling CGSpace1397242024-11-07T09:26:13Z Making food systems work for complementary feeding in low- and middle-income countries: Meeting Report Micronutrient Forum food systems children nutrition low income groups Food systems currently are not meeting the needs of children in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). across the globe. In these countries, two in three children between the ages of 6 and 23 months lack the diverse diets they need for healthy growth, development, and future economic success. Nutrient requirements of children in this age group are high due to rapid growth and development while the quantities of food they can consume to meet these requirements is small, highlighting the need for locally grown nutrient-dense foods and in contexts where these are not available, fortified complementary foods. Low availability and unaffordability of diverse foods appropriate for young children limit access to a nutritious diet. Bold actions are needed to ensure that food systems and more particularly, agricultural production, food supply chains, and food environments sustainably provide healthier and more nutritious diets for this vulnerable age group. On behalf of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the Micronutrient Forum (the “Forum”) and USAID Advancing Nutrition organized an expert consultation on December 4–5, 2023 on food system approaches to discuss strategies to increase the availability, affordability, accessibility, and aspirational aspects of nutritious and safe foods appropriate for complementary feeding that can be purchased by low-income households. The 43 participants’ expertise covered nutrition, food systems from local to global levels, policy and business expertise and represented research, bilateral, technical, and implementing organizations, United Nations agencies, and the private sector. 2024-02-27 2024-02-28T17:07:45Z 2024-02-28T17:07:45Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139724 en https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139697 Open Access application/pdf Micronutrient Forum Making food systems work for complementary feeding in low- and middle-income countries: Meeting Report. 2023. Washington, DC: Micronutrient Forum.
spellingShingle food systems
children
nutrition
low income groups
Micronutrient Forum
Making food systems work for complementary feeding in low- and middle-income countries: Meeting Report
title Making food systems work for complementary feeding in low- and middle-income countries: Meeting Report
title_full Making food systems work for complementary feeding in low- and middle-income countries: Meeting Report
title_fullStr Making food systems work for complementary feeding in low- and middle-income countries: Meeting Report
title_full_unstemmed Making food systems work for complementary feeding in low- and middle-income countries: Meeting Report
title_short Making food systems work for complementary feeding in low- and middle-income countries: Meeting Report
title_sort making food systems work for complementary feeding in low and middle income countries meeting report
topic food systems
children
nutrition
low income groups
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139724
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