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February 24 2001
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Vitamin A Is Saving Children's Lives

 

A global campaign to distribute high-dose vitamin A capsules to malnourished children has saved the lives of almost one million children around the world since 1998.

In one prime example of the program's success, organizers in Nepal say childhood vitamin A deficiency should be virtually eradicated in that country within the next 2 years.

If you provide children with enough vitamin A then their mortality drops about 23%, and that makes vitamin A distribution one of the most essential child survival programs.

The global campaign -- launched in 1997 -- is a partnership between UNICEF and the World Health Organization (WHO), as well as the governments of Canada, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Japan, and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).

Vitamin A is an essential part of basic nutrition -- the lack of which can severely compromise the body's immune system, raising risks for childhood illnesses such as diarrhea and measles.

According to UNICEF, vitamin A deficiency is a fact of life in 72 countries, primarily in Asia and Africa.

The nice thing about vitamin A is that if you eat a lot, then it gets stored in the body, so you can give -- with one capsule -- enough to cover a child's need for 4 to 6 months.

So basically, if you can give two capsules a year to a child you can prevent that child from becoming vitamin A deficient, and you can prevent all the negative consequences thereof.

Striking Success In Nepal

The benefits of UNICEF's vitamin A outreach program are strikingly evident in the Himalayan Kingdom of Nepal, where 9 million of the country's 23 million people live on less than $1 per day.

Against this back-drop, UNICEF, USAID, the Nepali government's Ministry of Health, and local non-governmental partners are making vitamin A capsules available to almost 4 million children between 6 months and 5 years of age.

The total cost of the project is just over $2 million a year -- less than $1 per child.

Overcoming difficulties such as widespread illiteracy and a harsh terrain, Nepal has become one of the vitamin A campaign's success stories. In fact, UNICEF estimates that the program saved as many as 200,000 lives between 1993 (when the program started) and 2000. That success has not come easily, however.

You're not just challenging poverty. You're also challenging an entire tradition of prejudicial attitudes towards women. It cuts across all of our work. It starts with getting the mother to bargain with her husband to take off a half day of work in order to bring her child in for a vaccination or a vitamin A capsule.

In Nepal's case, trust is being built by groups of local women known as Female Community Health Volunteers (FCHVs). These unpaid, often uneducated and illiterate volunteers have become the moral and physical backbone of the program -- mobilizing their local community to take advantage of UNICEF's vitamin A distribution efforts.

Already over 90% of Nepalese children have received their yearly dosage of vitamin A. USAID Nepal believes that despite low literacy rates and its rugged terrain, 100% coverage will be reached by 2002.

United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) Hanoi February 12, 2001



Dr. Mercola Dr. Mercola's Comments:

Distributing vitamin A capsules to third world countries is something I could fully support. It is a shame that Bill Gates, who is the largest philanthropist in the world, is directing his funding toward immunizations and not nutritional support.

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