Micronutrient Facts
Vitamin A
"Improved vitamin A nutrition could prevent up to 2.5 million deaths annually among children under 5 years." Vitamin A for the Children of the World Task Force Sight and Life, 2000.
* Vitamin A deficiency causes night blindness and is the single most important cause of childhood blindness in developing countries. Every year, about 500,000 children lose their sight as a result of vitamin A deficiency. The majority (about 70%) die within one year of losing their sight.
*Vitamin A deficiency increases the risk of severe illness, and even death, from common childhood infections such as diarrheal diseases and measles. In developing countries 200?300 million children of preschool age are at risk of vitamin A deficiency.
* Vitamin A deficiency may increase the risk of maternal mortality in pregnant women. Nearly 600,000 women die from childbirth-related causes each year, the vast majority of them from complications which could be reduced through better nutrition, such as vitamin A.
Iron
Iron deficiency, and specifically iron deficiency anemia, is one of the most severe and important nutritional deficiencies in the world. Preschool children and women of reproductive age are at highest risk. As many as 4?5 billion people, 66?80% of the world's population, may be iron deficient and approximately 2 billion people, more than 30% of the world's population, are anemic. It is estimated that more than half of the pregnant women in developing countries are anemic.
* Iron deficiency impairs the cognitive development of children through to adolescence.
* Iron deficiency damages immune mechanisms, and is associated with increased morbidity rates.
* Iron deficiency impairs physical work capacity in men and women by up to 30%.
* Iron deficiency during pregnancy is associated with multiple adverse outcomes for both mother and infant, including increased risk of sepsis, maternal mortality, perinatal mortality, and low birth weight.
Iron deficiency and anemia reduce learning ability and the work capacity of individuals and entire populations, bringing serious economic consequences and obstacles to national development.
Iodine
The problem of iodine deficiency is especially serious for pregnant women and young children. During pregnancy, even a mild deficiency of iodine can reduce brain development of the fetus limiting the intellectual ability of an individual for life.
* Iodine deficiency can cause severe mental and physical retardation, known as cretinism.
* Iodine deficiency in chronic form, can cause goiter (a disorder characterized by swelling of the thyroid gland) in both adults and children.
* Iodine deficiency most commonly, impedes fetal brain development. At the population level, the consequence of iodine deficiency is a 10?15% lower average intellectual quotient (IQ), which affects the social and economic development of both communities and nations.
The World Bank has estimated that, combined with vitamin A deficiency and iron deficiency, iodine deficiency may lower the economic wealth of a nation by as much as 5% every year.
Folic Acid
An estimated 300,000 children are born each year with spina bifida and anencephaly, which are severe neural tube defects. Approximately 75%, 225,000, of these affected births could be prevented through increased consumption of synthetic folic acid by all women of reproductive age.
* Folic acid can help prevent birth defects of the brain (anencephaly) and the spinal cord (spina bifida) called neural tube defects.
* Folic acid can help prevent anemia.
* Folic acid can possibly help prevent breast cancer, colon cancer and heart disease
Vitamin A
"Improved vitamin A nutrition could prevent up to 2.5 million deaths annually among children under 5 years." Vitamin A for the Children of the World Task Force Sight and Life, 2000.
* Vitamin A deficiency causes night blindness and is the single most important cause of childhood blindness in developing countries. Every year, about 500,000 children lose their sight as a result of vitamin A deficiency. The majority (about 70%) die within one year of losing their sight.
*Vitamin A deficiency increases the risk of severe illness, and even death, from common childhood infections such as diarrheal diseases and measles. In developing countries 200?300 million children of preschool age are at risk of vitamin A deficiency.
* Vitamin A deficiency may increase the risk of maternal mortality in pregnant women. Nearly 600,000 women die from childbirth-related causes each year, the vast majority of them from complications which could be reduced through better nutrition, such as vitamin A.
Iron
Iron deficiency, and specifically iron deficiency anemia, is one of the most severe and important nutritional deficiencies in the world. Preschool children and women of reproductive age are at highest risk. As many as 4?5 billion people, 66?80% of the world's population, may be iron deficient and approximately 2 billion people, more than 30% of the world's population, are anemic. It is estimated that more than half of the pregnant women in developing countries are anemic.
* Iron deficiency impairs the cognitive development of children through to adolescence.
* Iron deficiency damages immune mechanisms, and is associated with increased morbidity rates.
* Iron deficiency impairs physical work capacity in men and women by up to 30%.
* Iron deficiency during pregnancy is associated with multiple adverse outcomes for both mother and infant, including increased risk of sepsis, maternal mortality, perinatal mortality, and low birth weight.
Iron deficiency and anemia reduce learning ability and the work capacity of individuals and entire populations, bringing serious economic consequences and obstacles to national development.
Iodine
The problem of iodine deficiency is especially serious for pregnant women and young children. During pregnancy, even a mild deficiency of iodine can reduce brain development of the fetus limiting the intellectual ability of an individual for life.
* Iodine deficiency can cause severe mental and physical retardation, known as cretinism.
* Iodine deficiency in chronic form, can cause goiter (a disorder characterized by swelling of the thyroid gland) in both adults and children.
* Iodine deficiency most commonly, impedes fetal brain development. At the population level, the consequence of iodine deficiency is a 10?15% lower average intellectual quotient (IQ), which affects the social and economic development of both communities and nations.
The World Bank has estimated that, combined with vitamin A deficiency and iron deficiency, iodine deficiency may lower the economic wealth of a nation by as much as 5% every year.
Folic Acid
An estimated 300,000 children are born each year with spina bifida and anencephaly, which are severe neural tube defects. Approximately 75%, 225,000, of these affected births could be prevented through increased consumption of synthetic folic acid by all women of reproductive age.
* Folic acid can help prevent birth defects of the brain (anencephaly) and the spinal cord (spina bifida) called neural tube defects.
* Folic acid can help prevent anemia.
* Folic acid can possibly help prevent breast cancer, colon cancer and heart disease
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