Press Release:
At least 13 per cent of Nigerian children risk growing up
with mental deformity unless proper iodine is part of their nutrition,
according to professor emeritus, Babatunde Oguntona, who calls on government to
pay greater attention to public health.
“If we don't keep iodine level properly, we'll have 13% of Nigerian
children mentally deformed,” Prof. Oguntona said at the weekend in Lagos at a
one-day Nutrition Symposium on ‘Malnutrition,
Child Development and the Media’ organised by the Media Centre Against
Child Malnutrition (MeCAM).
“Imagine 13 percent of parliamentarians mentally deformed.
Inadequate iodine in our food is a serious threat. You can't talk of
development when you ignore the issue of nutrition status of your people,” he
added, rapping the Nigerian authorities for their poor response to the threats
of malnutrition.
Oguntona, a former president of the Nutrition Society of
Nigeria, said between 13 and 18 Nigerians children die of malnutrition and
related diseases every hours and called on the media to step up advocacy on the
issue.
Ivy Ibiso KingHarry, an associate at the Scaling Up Nutrition
Business Network | Global Alliance on Improved Nutrition (GAIN), said the media
have a duty to promote messages on nutrition as influencers and change agents.
She added however that such media efforts must flow from proper understanding
of the science of nutrition and effective delivery of messages in language
understood by common people.
She urged reporters to always fact-check and scrutinize
official data on malnutrition, be consistent and build trust in their duty as
gatekeepers.