The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has disclosed that Nigeria has the higher number of malnurisd children in Africa and ranked second in the world.
UNICEF Nutrition Officer, Nkeiru Enwelum said child malnutrition in Nigeria remains a major impediment to the attainment of Sustainable Development Goals SDG2 which is zero hunger.
in her presentation at a 2-day Media Dialogue held in Enugu on Thursday, Enwelum noted that 45 percent of all child deaths is from poor nutrition.
Enwelum called on government at all levels to address the problem of malnutrition through concerted efforts and ensure the delivery of high impact nutrition intervention for children.
She noted that poor nutrition in the 1,000 days from conception of a child to 2 years of age would result into permanent damage in the child.
According to her, “Government must ensure that children get much need nutrition that they need to be able to grow and thrive. If Nigeria is able to achieve this, we will be able to achieve the SDGs targets and enhance national productivity.”
“Failure to tackle malnutrition can result in long term cognitive and growth impacts, loss of income for households and up to 15% GDP loss for Nigeria and increased morbidity and potential death,” Enwelum.
Speaking during the Media Dialogue, UNICEF Communication Specialist, Dr Geoffrey Njoku charged journalists to write data driven stories on child malnutrition to prompt government to tackle the problem.
Also in his presentation, a lecturer at the Department of Mass Communication Enugu State University of Science and Technology, Enugu, Dr. Chidiebere Ezinwa said malnourished children face a bleak future and tasked government at all levels to take actions to address child malnutrition in the country.
He said adequate nutrition is a right of the child. A child should be well fed so that the child would do well in school And the future of the child would be bright.Ezinwa said “if a child is not well fed, That means several rights of the that child has been taken away from the child. A malnurisd child would not do well in school and if a child fails to do well in school, that means the child’s future is affected. He cannot get a good job. When a child cannot get a good job, the child is condemned to poverty and it be an intergenerational poverty.”