Current location:home page > Food News

Energy dense supplements may not benefit malnourished children

admin2 days agoFood News5
The research, conducted by the international non-governmental organization Action Against Hunger-Fra…
The research, conducted by the international non-governmental organization Action Against Hunger-France in collaboration with a group of European researchers, suggests that giving ready-to-use food supplements (RUSF) to young malnourished did not increase key signals of acute malnutrition such as having a low body weight.

Writing in PLOS Medicine, the researchers revealed that when children received RUSF in addition to a general food distribution in did not reduce levels of wasting (low weight for height) but slightly increased their height and haemoglobin levels.

"Adding child-targeted RUSF supplementation to a general food distribution resulted in increased hemoglobin status and linear growth, accompanied by a reduction in diarrhea and fever episodes. However, we could not find clear evidence that adding RUSF to a household food ration distribution of staple foods was more effective in preventing acute malnutrition," said the authors – led by Lieven Huybregts from Ghent University in Belgium.

"Other context-specific alternatives for preventing acute malnutrition should therefore be investigated," said the authors.

Study details

The research team performed a cluster of randomised controlled trial to investigate the effect of a targeted daily dose of RUSF in children over the age of six months. The team randomly assigned 14 household clusters in the city of Abeche, Chad, into an intervention or control arm.

All the households received a general food distribution that included staple foods but eligible children in the intervention households were also given a daily RUSF ration while those in the control arm were not.

At the end of the study period, Huybregts and his colleagues found that the addition of RUSF to the household food rations had little effect on the incidence of wasting.

However, compared to the children in the control group, those in the intervention group had a greater gain in height-for-age, slightly higher hemoglobin levels, and lower rates of diarrhea and fever, as reported by the child's parents.

Filling the gap

In an accompanying perspective article (found here ) Kathryn Dewey and Mary Arimond from the University of California in the USA (uninvolved in the study), argue that there is ‘a clear need’ for additional research to understand the potential growth-promoting effect of certain ingredients in nutritional supplements.

"High-quality programmatic studies can help provide urgently needed information on the cost and comparative cost effectiveness of different integrated strategies for filling nutrient gaps and promoting healthy growth,” they say.

Related articles

Yum's China rebound dimmed by India, Pizza Hut weakness

Yum Brands Inc on Wednesday said its KFC business bounced back in China, its No. 1 market, but its s…

McDonald's feels 'bit deceived' by audit results from China plant

McDonald's Corp Chief Executive Don Thompson said the company feels "a bit deceived" by the audit it…

Fresh or chilled asparagus account for half of Peru's air shipments

According to the Peruvian Foreign Trade Society (Comex Peru), Peru exported 74,774 tons of agricultu…

Nestlé, R&R form ice cream, frozen food joint venture

 Nestlé S.A., Switzerland, and R&R, a UK-based ice cream processor, created Froneri, a joint ven…

'Healthy' positioning changing the ice cream, frozen desserts market

Considering that 90% of all U.S. households purchase frozen desserts the consumption of these produc…

Dunkin' Donuts unveils new Coffee Creme Donuts

US-based doughnut company Dunkin' Donuts has introduced new Coffee Creme Donuts. The donuts are ava…