![]() |
| News & Outreach |
|
||||||
Global Health MattersMarch - April, 2009 | Volume 8, Issue 2
Gates grant launches nutrition study![]() Photo by Alejandro Lipszyc, World Bank Poor nutrition may be linked to intestinal infections in children like these, who are eating free school lunch in Una, Brazil. The Foundation for the National Institutes of Health and Fogarty have launched a five-year study to investigate the linkages between malnutrition and intestinal infections and their effects on children in the developing world. An estimated 20 million children under 5 are severely malnourished, leaving them more vulnerable to illness and early death, according to the World Health Organization. The project is funded by a grant of nearly $30 million from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to the FNIH. Poor nutrition in early childhood may lead to cognitive defects and poor physical development, may increase susceptibility to and severity of infections and may diminish the effectiveness of childhood vaccines. At the same time, infections causing diarrhea can damage the intestines, impair nutrient absorption and harm the immune system. “We anticipate that this research network will make critical discoveries that will help us save the lives of those most at risk—the world’s youngest and poorest children,” said Dr. Tachi Yamada, president of the Gates Foundation’s global health program. FNIH Chairman Dr. Charles A. Sanders said, “With the establishment of this remarkable partnership, we hope to shed light on critical questions such as which organisms or infections disrupt growth and development, as well as identify the time in early life when those factors have the greatest impact on morbidity and mortality.” FNIH and Fogarty are coordinating the research effort, which will be conducted in collaboration with other partners, including universities in the United States and institutions in the developing world. These partnerships will establish a network of urban and rural sites in Asia, Africa and South America. In addition, the genetic diversity of the human populations involved in the network will enable investigators to study the host factors responsible for differential susceptibility to infectious agents and malnutrition. These associated genomic studies will be supported by Gates Foundation awards to the University of Virginia and to Washington University, St. Louis. The network will be coordinated by Dr. Michael Gottlieb of FNIH and Dr. Mark Miller of Fogarty. Its network’s main objectives are to create a standardized and harmonized set of epidemiological tools to accurately study the links between intestinal infections and gut physiology as risk factors for malnutrition across a number of diverse sites in the developing For more information, visit http://tinyurl.com/cqx7b9. Should you require Adobe Acrobat for viewing PDFs, current and free accessible plug-ins are available at the Adobe website.
|
|||||||
|