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New Partnership to Improve
Nutrition
HarvestPlus and India agree to collaborate on biofortifying crops
to address persistent micronutrient deficiency in young
children
Despite India's economic progress in recent years, millions
of Indians still suffer the insidious affects of micronutrient
malnutrition. Children are especially vulnerable, and recent World
Bank estimates paint a grim picture, finding more than half of
preschool children to suffer subclinical vitamin A deficiency and
more than three-quarters iron-deficiency anemia.
Earlier this year, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh lamented
the slow progress in improving the nutritional status of children
under 6 and said that action was urgently needed. In March, the
government of India and HarvestPlus, a Challenge Program of the
Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR),
signed a memorandum of understanding to collaborate on developing
and disseminating crop varieties biofortified to grow with enhanced
micronutrient content and so reduce micronutrient malnutrition in
India .
India had already launched its own initiative called the Indian
Biofortification Program (IBP). As HarvestPlus developed and
advanced the biofortification strategy upon which the IBP is based,
it seemed natural that the two programs would eventually work
closely together. The IBP has chosen to focus on three staple
crops: rice, wheat and maize. The memorandum details collaboration
between HarvestPlus and the IBP on several topics including (1)
developing and sharing common methodologies and protocols for
measuring mineral and vitamin density in crop and food samples; (2)
exchanging samples, materials and other research data; and (3)
undertaking other joint activities to share knowledge.
Through these efforts, HarvestPlus scientists will contribute to
reducing the micronutrient malnutrition that continues to plague
India's rural poor.
HarvestPlus is coordinated by the CGIAR-supported International
Center for Tropical Agriculture and International Food Policy
Research Institute. For more information, please visit www.HarvestPlus.org .
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