also promote awareness of global nutrition security issues, and participate in national and international professional meetings that have a strong agenda addressing global nutrition security. Furthermore, DNs volunteer in local, national, or international humanitarian assistance efforts and medical.
Dr. Rezzan pointed out that food insecurity causes serious complications and inadequate intake of key nutrients causes poor physical and mental health in adults and depression in women; overweight and weight gain (especially among women from marginal and low food security households); adverse health outcomes for infants and toddlers; behaviour problems in preschool-aged children; lower educational achievement in school age children; and depressive disorder and suicidal symptoms in adolescents.
“Under-nutrition affects individuals with both chronic and acute illness; starvation (i.e., anorexia nervosa); and is especially damaging to those more vulnerable to food insecurity such as the elderly, socially isolated, or those with low income. This bleak scenario is compounded by the prevalence of poor food preparation methods that lead to nutrient loss. Lack of dietary diversification also aggravates the problem,” the dietician remarked.
Most of these problems are due to lack of access to adequate food. However, this does not always have to be the case as up to half of the food produced today is lost, wasted, or discarded as a result of inefficiency. In developing nations, food waste most commonly occurs post-harvest because of poor storage and transport infrastructure. Only an estimated 43% of the cereal produced is available for human consumption, as a result of harvest and post-harvest distribution losses and use of cereal for animal feed.
Food insecurity is defined as reduced food intake or disrupted eating patterns in a household due to lack of money or other resources. Food insecurity creates a vicious cycle of disease and malnutrition.
According to recent national estimates, 58 per cent of the country’s total population is facing food insecurity, and in these households, almost 50 per cent of women and children were malnourished. The survey shows that stunting (short height for age), wasting (low weight for height) and micronutrient deficiencies are widespread in Pakistan.