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Moderate acute malnutrition: uncovering the known and unknown for more effective prevention and treatment.

Abstract
With a fast-approaching post-Millennium Development Goal era, there is an urgent need to boost global investment in efforts to reduce child malnutrition. Critical to the management of moderate malnutrition, and therefore to the new Sustainable Development Goals, is addressing severe acute malnutrition (SAM) and moderate acute malnutrition (MAM). Despite the considerable difference in the approximate number of children affected by MAM (33 million) compared with SAM (19 million), there is currently no standardized approach to the management of MAM. In partnership with Valid International, the World Food Programme, and the Micronutrient Initiative, the International Atomic Energy Agency hosted the International Symposium on Understanding Moderate Malnutrition in Children for Effective Interventions in Vienna, Austria, 26-29 May 2014. This symposium focused on the management (prevention and treatment) of MAM in children. The symposium convened over 350 participants from 63 countries, the majority of whom represented governments responding to moderate malnutrition in their populations, nearly 70 national and international organizations from the United Nations and nongovernmental sectors, and universities from around the world, as well as donor governments and private-sector entities. The symposium was structured around nine sessions over a 3-day period, progressing from a global analysis of the scale of the problem to recent research findings relevant to designing effective interventions. This Supplement contains a series of papers that summarize the symposium sessions and other fundamental aspects important to improving the management of moderate malnutrition in children.
AuthorsChristopher William Wegner, Cornelia Loechl, Najat Mokhtar
JournalFood and nutrition bulletin (Food Nutr Bull) Vol. 36 Issue 1 Suppl Pg. S3-8 (Mar 2015) ISSN: 0379-5721 [Print] United States
PMID25902608 (Publication Type: Introductory Journal Article)
Topics
  • Acute Disease
  • Austria
  • Child Nutrition Disorders (prevention & control, therapy)
  • Child, Preschool
  • Conservation of Natural Resources
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • International Cooperation
  • Malnutrition (prevention & control, therapy)
  • United Nations

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