Nairobi – Kenya’s ministry of health in partnership with multilateral donors and academia on Thursday launched a six-year project to promote nutrition status in the country through mass fortification of key staples.
Cabinet Secretary for Health Cleopa Mailu said the Kenya National Food Fortification Programme seeks to combat malnutrition through adding vitamins and minerals to maize flour, edible oils and salt.
“The country is still grappling with severe malnutrition and stunting that has worsened in the current drought cycle.
“The food fortification project will, therefore, help combat nutrients deficiency,’’ Mailu said.
The ministry of health will partner with a local university and industry to implement the six years national food fortification project funded by the European Union.
It focuses on improving the capacity of manufacturers to fortify maize flour and other staples consumed by poor households where the levels of malnutrition are higher.
Mailu said the project would complement ongoing initiatives to boost nutrition status in the country in line with World Health Organisation guidelines.
“The government and other stakeholders will intensify awareness targeting millers and consumers to promote uptake of fortified foods,’’ Mailu said.
He added that Kenya had established policy and legal framework to promote mass fortification of key staples with vitamins, iron and zinc.
Fortified foods are beyond the reach of Kenya’s poor household, hence the need to strengthen the capacity of millers to manufacture and distribute them at cheaper cost.
The Head of EU Delegation in Kenya, Erik Habers said that the six years food fortification project will ensure that micronutrients are added to 95 per cent of staples consumed in poor households.
“This project aims to strengthen the capacity of cereal millers to deliver micronutrient rich staple food to populations at risk of malnutrition,’’ Habers said.
Kenya has made significant progress towards achieving nutrition targets set by the World Health Assembly though poverty, ignorance, recurrent droughts and cultural beliefs have aggravated the malnutrition crises.
Gladys Mugambi, the Head of Nutrition and Dietetics, Ministry of Health, said that Kenya had promoted food fortification and exclusive breast feeding to address malnutrition and stunting.
“Implementation of low cost fortification programmes has been ongoing to ensure poor households have access to micronutrient rich foods,’’ Mugambi said.
Statistics from the ministry of health had indicated that the proportion of children affected by stunting, wasting and underweight in the country stood at 26 per cent, four per cent and 11 per cent respectively.
Mugambi said Kenya aims to reduce the proportion of stunted children to 20 per cent by 2022 while increasing exclusive breastfeeding from the current 62 per cent to 80 per cent in the near future.
“We have adopted a multi-sectoral approach to address malnutrition and stunting in the country,’’ Mugambi said.