
Hanoi (VNA)💜 - Vietnamese nutrition experts have warned of a serious vitamin E deficiency among children resulting from parents’ and child-care workers’ poor knowledge of healthy nutrition.
Nguyen Mai Ha, a mother of two, said she didn’t know that children need plenty of vitamin E for proper growth, and was only advised to give them supplements of essential nutrients vitamin A and D. At a periodic medical examination by HCM City Society of Clinical Nutrition (SCN), Ha, a 30-year-old banking official, said she had been feeding her two children according to the advice of her mother and elderly friends. Doctor Luu Ngan Tam, SCN chairwoman, explains that vitamin E plays a role in gene expression and helps children convert the foods they eat into energy. “The nutrient also acts an antioxidant to protect a child’s cells from damage that can increase lifetime risk of heart disease and cancer,” she says. The Hanoi-based National Institute of Nutrition surveys have revealed more than 50 percent of Vietnamese children fail to get enough vitamins, including vitamin E or iron in their daily meals.Increased awareness
The director of the National Institute of Nutrition, Assoc. Prof. Le Danh Tuyen, says 70 percent of Vietnamese kids aged 1-2 lack two kinds of necessary vitamins, A and E, both essential to the growth of a child. The cause is not only lack of money but also lack of knowledge. The institute is coordinating with a Japanese healthcare organisation to teach nutrition for kids aged 6 months-24 months to rural women in four northern provinces - Thai Nguyen, Bac Giang, Ha Giang and Ninh Binh. The three-year project, started in April 2014, is helping Vietnamese mothers change supplemental foods to provide adequate amounts of key vitamins and minerals for children. Nguyen Thi Hien, a project coordinator, says rural mothers don’t believe in using cooking oils or fat in processing food for infants because it causes constipation. “It is wrong thinking. Cook your child’s food with cold-pressed oils, such as olive or canola, because they contain between 2 and 5 milligrams of vitamin E per tablespoon,” Hien says.
VNA