posted on 2024-09-06, 06:55authored byLawrence Haddad, Hannah Corbett
Putting an end to the current nutrition crisis by 2030 is possible, but only
if nutrition is embedded within a post-2015 development framework.
Undernutrition continues to afflict 170 million children worldwide and is
responsible for nearly 3 million child deaths each year. The life-long and wideranging
effects of undernutrition cannot be overstated – brain damage, immune
system malfunction, weaker schooling attainment, lower workforce productivity,
greater poverty and a greater susceptibility to chronic disease later in life. A new
development framework must seek to establish a much clearer and stronger set
of nutrition targets and indicators than exist within the current Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs).