Malnutrition, Poverty, and Intellectual Developmentby: Don QuixoteFri May 10, 2013 at 18:19:47 PM CDT |
Malnutrition, Poverty, and Intellectual DevelopmentNational Center for Children in Poverty (NCCP Malnutrition, Poverty, and Intellectual DevelopmentBy Larry Brown and Ernesto PollittOriginally Published in Scientific America February 1996The prevalence of malnutrition in children is staggering. Globally, nearly 195 million children younger than five years are undernourished. Malnutrition is most obvious in the developing countries, where the condition often takes severe forms; images of emaciated bodies in famine-struck or war-torn regions are tragically familiar. Yet milder forms are more common, especially in developed nations. Indeed, in 1992 an estimated 12 million American children consumed diets that were significantly below the recommended allowances of nutrients established by the National Academy of Sciences. Undernutrition triggers an array of health problems in children, many of which can become chronic. It can lead to extreme weight loss, stunted |
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