Brian Klepper joins us again today with a post that reminds us that good health care policy doesn't have to be complicated health care policy and can work for us on many fronts at once.
Plumpy'nut
by Brian Klepper
The NY Times recently had an important op-ed by Susan Shepherd, a pediatrician and medical advisor to Doctors Without Borders. The core of her message is that as the farm bill progresses through Congress, we should focus not only on the quantity of food that is produced and that we export for relief to underdeveloped nations, but on its quality as well.
Dr. Shepherd describes the difficulties in treating children who are victims of severe malnutrition, particularly in areas like Africa and South Asia where milk and clean water can be scarce.
The US and other international donors current supply fortified blended flours for moderately malnourished children. Much better and more accessible nutrition is available through a ready-to-use food called Plumpy'nut (or Plumpy). But Plumpy costs a little more, and current UN and US guidelines restrict its use to the 3% of children who have already descended to the most acute malnutrition.
Ten years ago, a French pediatric nutritionist affiliated with the World Health Organization, Andre Briend, developed Plumpy'nut, a high protein and high energy food bar comprised of peanut paste, vegetable oil, milk powder, powdered sugar, vitamins and minerals, that can be prepared locally and that has a two year shelf life in an unopened package. Children can be treated at home rather than in hospital settings, a critical advance. They receive 2 packets a day. Delivered in combination with Unimix, a vitamin-enriched flour for making porridge, a 2-4 week treatment costs $20 and can allow 90 percent of severely malnourished children to recover.
One of the lessons of Jeffrey Sachs' book, The End of Poverty, is that we now have the tools to stabilize the billion people who remain in extreme poverty, so that we can then help them onto the bottom rungs of the economic ladder, where they have a chance to prosper.
Despite its current economic gloom, America remains a center of prosperity in a volatile world. Think of the goodwill we could create if we resolved to couple our aid with the best we we've learned in food science and other disciplines. The creation of Plumpy is a shining example of what's possible, and the work of Doctors Without Borders and other relief organizations an inspiration for how we can cultivate peace in the world.
A Health Care Reform Blog––Bob Laszewski's review of the latest developments in federal health policy, health care reform, and marketplace activities in the health care financing business.
Subscribe
Avoid having to check back.
Subscribe to Health Care Policy and Marketplace Review and receive an email each time we post.
Blog Archive
-
▼
2008
(151)
-
▼
February
(20)
- A Slowing Economy--What Impact Will It Have On The...
- Another Government Study Questions the Medicare Ad...
- Drug Patents and "Pay-For-Delay"--Drug Industry Pa...
- Health Insurance Industry "Racing to Defuse a Grow...
- Give Cuomo and the Physicians What They Say They W...
- How Profitable is Medicare Advantage? The United/H...
- The Argument for Specialty Hospitals
- Hillary Clinton Criticizes Barack Obama's Health C...
- A "Health Care Fed" and Obama
- Health Wonk Review Is UP
- The Usual and Customary Controversy--Who's Cheatin...
- Bush Administration Now Willing to Increase SCHIP ...
- Lifetime Health Care Costs For the Obese and Smoke...
- Mom, Dad, the Kids and Medicare––Would an Obama Pr...
- Haley Barbour or Hillary Clinton?
- Employers Finally Figuring Out They Can Shift Reti...
- No One Ever Did Understand "Customary and Reasonable"
- Bush Budget Dead On Arrival But It Underscores the...
- When it Comes To Health Care Policy It Really Does...
- "Plumpy"––A Reminder That Good Policy Works on Man...
-
▼
February
(20)