Helen Keller International Issues
How-To Guide to Improve Nutrition
Services
Dakar, Senegal,
August 23, 2005 – Helen
Keller International (HKI) has
released a newly improved How-To
Guide for quality assessment
of nutrition services offered
in health care facilities. HKI
first issued the guide from its
Africa Regional Office in 2003,
and has updated it following
a field test in Sierra Leone
and multiple reviews by child
survival experts.
As the accessibility to and quantity
of health services continues to
increase, the assurance that quality
nutrition services are included
is crucial. In a presentation
to the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID),
David Pelletier, Associate Professor
in the Division of Nutritional
Sciences at Cornell University,
highlighted the link between malnutrition
and physical growth, cognitive
development, and morbidity and
mortality. In addition, maternal
mortality and morbidity, particularly
iron-deficiency anemia and repeated
malaria and parasitic infections,
are closely linked to nutrition
care. Professor Pelletier
emphasized exclusive breastfeeding
and adequate micronutrient intake
as key interventions to combat
malnutrition, and his recommendations
are among those included in HKI’s
revised How-To Guide.
Designed to be easily adaptable
to assess the nutrition elements
of prenatal, postpartum, and sick-
and well-child visits, the guide
is currently available for download
in English with a French version
to be available shortly.
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