NUTRITION AND PRIMARY HEALTH CARE PHN 804 January 2012.

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NUTRITION AND PRIMARY HEALTH CARE PHN 804 January 2012

Transcript of NUTRITION AND PRIMARY HEALTH CARE PHN 804 January 2012.

NUTRITION AND PRIMARY HEALTH CARE

PHN 804

January 2012

Causes of and strategies for under-nutrition

throughout the life cycle

Nutrition and the life cycle

Fig 1. Relationship among the life stages

Learning Objectives

• By the end of this module the learner should be able to:– Describe importance of nutrition for all ages

of the life cycle– Outline the effects of malnutrition through the

lifecycle– Discuss strategies to break the malnutrition

cycle.

The Cycle of Under-nutrition

Child growth failure

Early pregnancy

Small adult women

Low birth weight babies

Low weight and height in teens

ACC/SCN, 1992

The cycle of under-nutrition

• Under nutrition that occurs during childhood, adolescent and pregnancy has as additive negative impact on the birth weight of infants.

• Intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) leads to a far higher risk of dying in the neonatal period or later infancy.

• A low –birth weight infant is thus more likely to be underweight or stunted in early life.

Causes of Under-nutrition

Life time consequences of being born

undernourished

Figure 2. Effects of malnutrition throughout the life cycle

Biological and Social risk factors for under-nutrition

Infancy and early childhood (0-24 months)

– Suboptimal breastfeeding practices– Inadequate complementary foods – Infrequent feeding – Frequent infections

Biological and Social risk factors for under-nutrition

Childhood (2-9 years) – Poor diets

– Poor health care– Poor maternal education

Biological and social risk factors for under-nutrition

Adolescence (10-19 years)– Increased nutritional demands

– Greater iron needs

– Early pregnancies

Biological and social risk factors for under-nutrition

Pregnancy and lactation • Higher nutritional requirements

• Increased micronutrient needs

• Closely-spaced reproductive cycles

Strategies to break the malnutrition cycle

• Solve economic and social problems

• Space pregnancies

• Reduce workloads

• Micronutrient deficiencies

Strategies to break the malnutrition cycle

Infancy through adolescence.– Infancy and early childhood (0–24

months old)

– Childhood (2–9 years old)

– Adolescence (10–19 years old)

Strategies to break the malnutrition cycle

Improve nutrition and health – For all women

– For pregnant women

– For lactating women

Contact points for nutrition action

Contact points– Prenatal

– At delivery

– At immediate post-partum

– Postnatal

Nutrition actions

• During prenatal visits– Counsel on increasing food intake.– Distribute iron/folic acid tablets.– Screen for severe anemia.– Complete 5 antitetanus immunizations for

pregnant women.– Monitor weight gain.– Deworm during 3rd trimester.

Nutrition actions

• During prenatal visits– Encourage family consumption of iodized salt.– Counsel to use treated bed-nets to reduce

malaria infection.– Educate on STIs and HIV and AIDS

transmission and prevention.– Counsel on breastfeeding following WHO

guidelines .

– Counsel on reducing workload

Nutrition actions

• At delivery and immediate post partum period

– Initiate skin-to-skin contact immediately after delivery.

– Counsel to breastfeed within 1 hour of delivery, checking positioning and attachment and following WHO guidelines .

– Give the mother vitamin A.

Nutrition actions

• During post natal visits– Counsel on increasing food intake.– Check iron/folic acid supplementation and continue

supplementation for mother to complete 6 months.– Educate on STIs and HIV and AIDS transmission and

prevention.– Counsel on breastfeeding following WHO guidelines .– Encourage family consumption of iodized salt.– Counsel to use treated bed-nets to reduce malaria

infection.

Nutrition impact indicators

• Birth weight • Mother’s height • Mother’s pre-pregnancy weight: • Body mass index • Mid-upper-arm circumference (MUAC)• Weight gain during pregnancy • Rate of weight gain during pregnancy

• Weight loss during lactation