News Links
- Home
- News
- Business
- Editorial
- The Waki Report
- The Alston Report
- Columnists
- Commentaries
- Cartoon
- Madd Madd World
- Pictures
- Special Reports
- Politics
- Parliament
- World News
- OdD nEwS
- Blogs
- Magazines
- Real Estate
- Agriculture
- Environment
- Travel
- Art & Literature
- Fashion
- Relationships
- Children
- Education
- Letters
- Point Blank
- Careers
- Celebrating Life
- Feedback
Poll
Your Say
Children lack vital nutrients, says report
Related Stories
From the depth of grief to the height of joy
Kenyans asked to offer decent lives to orphans
Teachers’ gift to needy students
Orphanage implicated in sex scam
Children with deformed lips smile again
Aiming for the top in public speaking
By Elizabeth Mwai
About a third of Kenyan children are stunted due to vitamin and mineral deficiency, a new report has shown.
The report indicates 85 per cent of Kenyan children aged below five are Vitamin A deficient and risk suffering from life threatening diseases like measles, while about five million school-aged children are anaemic.
According to the global study, if vitamin and mineral deficiency are not corrected between conception and the age of two, it may be too late to rectify later.
About 24 per cent of deaths from measles, diarrhoea and malaria are due to inadequate Vitamin A or Zinc.
"Children who themselves have insufficient micronutrient intake and absorption can suffer serious lifelong repercussions. If they survive infancy, their bodies may be weak and prone to diseases," says the report.
Birth defects
The report titled ‘Investing in the Future: A united call to action on Vitamin and Mineral deficiencies’, cautions that some children may suffer birth defects or become blind and may not go far in school.
Unicef Kenya’s Project Officer for Nutrition Noreen Prendiville said about 30 per cent of children aged below five were physically and mentally retarded due to nutrient deficiencies.
"It is tragic because they cannot reach their full mental and physical abilities," said Ms Prendiville.
She said 25 per cent of Kenyan children are reportedly undernourished and studies have shown that only 30 per cent of women breast-feed their babies.
Read all about: children Unicef
Business
Sports News
Today's magazine
Woman's Instinct
Forensic dentist and beauty queen She struts the runway like she was born to do it and makes heads turn with her enchanting features, long mane and the fact that she is usually the only Asian on most catwalks in Nairobi. But 29-year-old Amrit Khalsi has another life: She traded the haute couture designer outfits for a lab coat and the runway for the Kenyatta National Hospital morgue.
Adverts



