Thoughts on Attending
the 31st Session of the Standing
Committee on Nutrition
Lane Vanderslice
(April 2, 2004)
I was privileged to attend the 31st
Session of the Standing Committee on Nutrition,
during the week of March 22 and learned quite a
bit there. I hadnt ever been to a session
before. It was exhilarating to listen to about
250 people (and talk to a fair number) deeply
interested in and informed about nutrition
issues (hunger is a not a technically well
enough definedand possibly too emotive a
wordto have been frequently used there)
gathered together in one place. The four and
one half day session took place in New York at
the United Nations and UNICEF.
(Well, like so much in the modern world, what
this committee is requires some explanation.
Its name has not always been the same and it has
certainly changed important aspects of its way
of being/acting over the years. It was started,
under another name which escapes me at the
moment, to provide coordination between U.N.
agencies such as UNICEF, the United Nations
Childrens Fund, the Food and Agriculture
Organization, and the World Food Program on
nutrition issues. For many years, until very
recently, it was known as the sub-committee on
Nutrition. For most of its life it was a
committee of U.N. sub-organizations. Later it
broadened to include representatives of
developed country governmental organizations and
I presume developing countries, though they may
not have been as much in evidence for financial
or other reasons. Recently, about seven years or
so ago, it was broadened to include
representatives of civil society organizations
(CSOs). The secretariat of the SCN was also
moved from the FAO to WHO, evidently because it
was difficult to get things done at FAO.)
The meeting had three parts. The first and
second essentially covered the same ground--a
discussion of the
Millennium Development Goals and their
relation to nutrition. The first was a very
interesting series of plenary (full meetings of
everyone) and the second were the reports of the
standing committees, with discussion by those
attending. These standing committees appear to
be the most active portion of the SCN, and
certainly managed to get an incredible amount of
expertise focused on specific nutrition issues
It is very interesting to see how important
nutrition is by sector. For health, for example,
an estimated 50 percent of deaths from illness
and infection (such as measles) is in fact
caused by the weakened health caused by
malnutrition/hunger This is presented in the
5th Report on the World Nutrition
Situation (don't download unless you have a
fast internet connection--it is 141 pages).
However more accessible links are available at
http://www.unsystem.org/scn/Publications/foundation4dev/foundation4dev.htmThe
third was a series of meetings of
representatives of the three different types of
institutions represented there in order to
discuss issues and prepare for the next meeting
which will be in Brasilia, Brazil. I attended
the private sector meeting-- where there were
well over 100 people from about 80
non-governmental organizations, civil society
organizations and universities.
In summary.
-
This was an excellent
learning experience for me. I definitely have
a better understanding of important issues.
-
There are many nutrition
issues. There are at least 10 important
micronutrients that are in short supply.
How can they all be supplied to the right
people in poor countries? A micronutrient by
micronutrient approach is not possible due to
cost reasons, yet there appears to be no
broader approach. Moreover, actual food and
providing it to those who need it is an even
more difficult task.
-
While the level of effort
in trying to improve the nutrition of poor
people is impressive, it is very far from
sufficient.