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Global Campaign Charges Ahead to Reach the Unreached
Vitamin Angels' Vitamin A Campaign Gains Strength With Advice From Hopkins Experts
| Source: Vitamin Angels
SANTA BARBARA, CA--(Marketwire - September 24, 2008) - The growing food shortage has recently
reached crisis proportions in some countries around the world. Rising fuel
prices, the diversion of land to grow biofuel instead of food crops and the
increasing global population, have conspired to create the most significant
food crisis in over 30 years.
This plight is most prevalent in poor countries where malnutrition is
already a major public health problem causing sickness and death from
otherwise treatable illnesses. In September 2007, direct vitamin A
supplementation was recognized as one of the key strategies responsible for
reducing early childhood deaths to below 10 million in 2006, which is a
"first" in modern history.
In a given day, there is an estimated 134 million children up to 5 years of
age in the developing world that are vitamin A deficient. That is six
times the number of preschool-aged children in the United States. What's
worse, approximately 650,000 children will die this year from preventable
infectious diseases, such as diarrhea, measles and malaria because their
vitamin A status has left their immune systems too weak to fight the
disease.
"Vitamin A deficiency remains a major nutritional and health burden across
the most disadvantaged populations of the developing world," says Howard
Schiffer, founder of Vitamin Angels, a nonprofit organization working to
reduce deaths in children under 5 around the world by connecting vital
nutrition in the form of essential micronutrients, especially vitamin A.
Vitamin Angels' aggressive campaign, Operation 20/20, whose end goal is to
reduce childhood blindness and deaths caused by vitamin A deficiency
worldwide by the year 2020, is now reaching 5.5 million children in need in
17 countries around the world. To further validate and shape its campaign
strategy, Vitamin Angels commissioned a report from leading nutrition
experts at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
The report, authored by Keith West, Ph.D. and Monica Fox, M.H.S. of Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, serves as a roadmap for Vitamin
Angels' contribution to this worldwide health crisis. One of the report's
key findings is the emergence of an important, new potential area of
program involvement that could double the number of young child lives saved
each year from vitamin A supplementation. The new program would involve
vitamin A supplementation for newborns in conjunction with reaching
postpartum mothers.
"Supplementing newborns could save 250,000 infant lives each year in
Southern Asia alone," says Schiffer who emphasizes that Vitamin Angels'
cost for entire program including the two vitamin A capsules per year is
only pennies per child. "Vitamin A supplementation is an effective and
inexpensive intervention to prevent childhood blindness, other serious
illnesses and premature deaths."
Based on the report's conclusions, Vitamin Angels plans to collaborate in
dietary supplementation programs that stress both conventional and
innovative distribution mechanisms able to improve availability, access and
use of vitamin A. These programs will focus their efforts in regions and
countries with the greatest need, concentrate on underserved populations
and advocate for newly proven approaches for micronutrient distribution.
Vitamin Angels also plans to engage in efforts to connect vitamin A
supplementation with newborns, to further reduce infant mortality, while
contributing to the formation of policies required to bring this
intervention to scale. For more information about Vitamin Angels and how
to help go to: http://www.VitaminAngels.org.