5 results
Search Results
2. Toward an integrated approach to nutritional quality, environmental sustainability, and economic viability: research and measurement gaps.
- Author
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Herforth, Anna, Frongillo, Edward A., Sassi, Franco, Mclean, Mireille Seneclauze, Arabi, Mandana, Tirado, Cristina, Remans, Roseline, Mantilla, Gilma, Thomson, Madeleine, and Pingali, Prabhu
- Subjects
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NUTRITION , *CLIMATE change , *FOOD security , *SOCIOECONOMICS , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
Nutrition is affected by numerous environmental and societal causes. This paper starts with a simple framework based on three domains: nutritional quality, economic viability, and environmental sustainability, and calls for an integrated approach in research to simultaneously account for all three. It highlights limitations in the current understanding of each domain, and how they influence one another. Five research topics are identified: measuring the three domains (nutritional quality, economic viability, environmental sustainability); modeling across disciplines; furthering the analysis of food systems in relation to the three domains; connecting climate change and variability to nutritional quality; and increasing attention to inequities among population groups in relation to the three domains. For an integrated approach to be developed, there is a need to identify and disseminate available metrics, modeling techniques, and tools to researchers, practitioners, and policy makers. This is a first step so that a systems approach that takes into account potential environmental and economic trade-offs becomes the norm in analyzing nutrition and food-security patterns. Such an approach will help fill critical knowledge gaps and will guide researchers seeking to define and address specific research questions in nutrition in their wider socioeconomic and environmental contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Agriculture, nutrition, and health in global development: typology and metrics for integrated interventions and research.
- Author
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Masters, William A., Webb, Patrick, Griffiths, Jeffrey K., and Deckelbaum, Richard J.
- Subjects
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NUTRITION , *AGRICULTURAL economics , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *SOCIAL types , *ECONOMIC development , *EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
Despite rhetoric arguing that enhanced agriculture leads to improved nutrition and health, there is scant empirical evidence about potential synergies across sectors or about the mix of actions that best supports all three sectors. The geographic scale and socioeconomic nature of these interventions require integration of previously separate research methods. This paper proposes a typology of interventions and a metric of integration among them to help researchers build on each other's results, facilitating integration in methods to inform the design of multisector interventions. The typology recognizes the importance of regional effect modifiers that are not themselves subject to randomized assignment, and trade-offs in how policies and programs are implemented, evaluated, and scaled. Using this typology could facilitate methodological pluralism, helping researchers in one field use knowledge generated elsewhere, each using the most appropriate method for their situation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Cost-benefit analysis of a micronutrient supplementation and early childhood stimulation program in Nicaragua.
- Author
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Boo, Florencia Lopez, Palloni, Giordano, and Urzua, Sergio
- Subjects
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CHILD development , *COST effectiveness , *MICRONUTRIENTS , *DIETARY supplements , *CHILDREN'S health , *CHILD nutrition - Abstract
This paper estimates the cost-benefit ratio for an integrated early childhood development program in Nicaragua (PAININ). Using longitudinal data, we estimate the average treatment effects of PAININ including micronutrient sprinkles on the prevalence of anemia and hemoglobin levels among disadvantaged children aged 6-36 months. We also estimate the effects of PAININ excluding sprinkles on cognitive outcomes among children aged 2.5-5 years. In the younger age group the program reduced anemia by 4 percentage points after 8 months and nearly 6 percentage points after 1 year; the latter is a 26% decrease in anemia. In the older age group, the program improved verbal and numeric memory after a year and a half, but the effects were modest (0.13 SD). When analyzing its potential impact on earnings, we conclude that the discounted annual costs of the program per child are less than the discounted annual increase in beneficiary earnings. Specifically, we estimate a cost-benefit ratio of 1.50 from the PAININ plus sprinkles package. Our sensitivity analysis suggests a range for this ratio between 1.30 and 2.30. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Nutrition, Inflammation, and Cognitive Function.
- Author
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Wärnberg, Julia, Gomez‐Martinez, Sonia, Romeo, Javier, Díaz, Ligia‐Esperanza, and Marcos, Ascensión
- Subjects
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NUTRITION , *INFLAMMATION , *COGNITIVE ability , *CRITICAL thinking , *NEURODEGENERATION , *NUTRITIONALLY induced diseases , *IMMUNITY , *NEUROLOGY , *HEALTH - Abstract
Inflammation, particularly low-grade chronic inflammation, appears to affect several brain functions, from early brain development to the development of neurodegenerative disorders and perhaps some psychiatric diseases. On the other hand, nutrition and dietary components and patterns have a plethora of anti- and pro-inflammatory effects that could be linked to cognitive function. Even a modest effect of nutrition on cognitive decline could have significant implications for public health. This paper summarizes the available evidence regarding inflammation as a key mechanism in cognitive function and nutritional pro- or anti-inflammatory effects with the purpose of linking the apparent disparate disciplines of nutrition, immunity, and neurology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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