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MDG 4: Reduce Child Mortality
Every year, 11 million children in
developing countries die before they reach the age of five - half
of them from malnutrition. Increased food availability resulted in
a 25 percent drop in child malnutrition from 1970 to 1995,
demonstrating that agricultural productivity improvements make
important contributions to gains in child survival
rates.
Research Results :
-- Orange-fleshed sweetpotatoes with enhanced beta-carotene help
combat child malnutrition in large swaths of East Africa.
-- An innovative CGIAR initiative, the
HarvestPlus Challenge Program, is working to develop staple foods
rich in the micronutrients vitamin A, iron and zinc using a process
called biofortification. Scientists are currently focusing on rice,
wheat, maize, cassava, maize, beans and sweetpotato, the basic food
crops that are grown and consumed by poor people and for which a
solid knowledge base already exists. Subsequent efforts will
include the so-called orphan crops that do not attract investment
from the private sector: millet, sorghum, potatoes, pigeonpeas,
lentils, plantains, barley, cowpeas, groundnuts and
yams.
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