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Improved Child Nutrition through Cattle
Ownership in Kenya
Malnutrition affects large numbers of children throughout
the developing world. In Kenya, nearly one-third of children
showed evidence of chronic malnutrition in the mid 1990s.
A major cause of malnutrition in Kenya is inadequate dietary
intake, both in terms of quantity and quality. The effects
of inadequate intake are most pronounced during periods of
rapid physiological change, such as pregnancy or childhood
and adolescence. The consequences of malnutrition include
reduced resistance to disease, retarded physical growth, poor
cognitive development, and reduced physical activity.
Such factors diminish the productivity not only of individuals,
but collectively of societies and whole nations. This brief
considers how positive factors, such as cattle ownership,
can encourage milk intake, especially among the young. This
is the last in a series of five policy briefs.
Other issues include:
- Tackling malnutrition, especially micronutrient deficits,
can have considerable long-term benefits for individual
children, both physically and mentally
- Milk consumption is very effective in addressing these
micronutrient deficiencies in children, especially for poor
households, as well as providing an important source of
protein.
- Cattle ownership offers a potential route to improved
child nutrition, whether by increasing milk availability
or by increasing household incomes.
- For these potential benefits to be realised, more understanding
is needed of allocations of milk and control of resources
within households.
- Continued efforts to educate people on the benefits of
milk consumption, and to increase children's access to milk
through means other than cattle ownership, would also be
beneficial.
- Policy directions that encourage milk availability and
consumption will bring significant long-term benefits to
the health and economy of Kenya.
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