Tuesday, November 11, 2025
24.5 C
Lagos

Don Seeks Establishment of Home Economics, Nutrition Extension Agents

A leading nutrition expert has called for the establishment of Home Economics and Nutrition Extension agents across the country in furtherance of efforts to curtail the menace of malnutrition, particularly protein malnutrition in Nigeria.
Prof. Henrietta Nkechi Ene-Obong of the Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Calabar, Cross River State, who made this call recently at the Protein Challenge Webinar themed ‘Bridging the Knowledge Gap’, noted that the agents would function much like agricultural extension officers, in the nutrition space.
She argued that the message about nutrition must be brought to the level of the people across every stratum of the society and where possible, provided in the local languages to help boost nutrition education.
According to her, “Home economics and nutrition extension agents would be in the best position to simplify the nutrition message and bring it to the people to bring about the desired outcome in behaviour from the citizenry.”
She called for the introduction of nutrition education in schools, nursery, primary and secondary, as students can learn and equally be able to teach their parents at home. The don stated that capacity must be developed to bridge the knowledge gap and put such knowledge into action.
Reports indicate that food consumption habits in Nigeria depend on the availability of food source, affordability of the food and knowledge of the nutrition value along with the personal choice or preference of the buyer.
On the importance of protein, she explained that proteins are made up of amino acids, which are the building blocks of the body tissues; hence they are found throughout the body. Pregnant and lactating women need extra proteins to help in the development of the foetus and milk production, she noted. She said that healthy adults need to consume an average of 0.8g of protein per kilogram of body weight, for individuals with minimal to intense physical activity.
In family meals, it is important that carbohydrates with proteins are mixed, she said for, example, rice and beans, yam and eggs. We must ensure that infants and young children consume foods from at least four food groups: grains, roots and tubers; legumes and nuts; dairy products; flesh foods and eggs; vitamin A-rich fruits and vegetables (like carrots and sweet potatoes) and other fruits and vegetables.”
Prof Ene-Obong revealed that of all measures designed to stop all forms of malnutrition, the food-based approach is the most cost-effective.
She stated that with adequate nutrition in the first 1,000 days of life and adequate maternal and adolescent nutrition, the nation stands a better chance of curbing the menace of malnutrition. The home economics and nutrition agents will be at the forefront of pursuing this agenda.
The nutrition enthusiast stated that mothers need to be encouraged to engage in exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months and to continue breastfeeding for two years. Adequate complementary feeding should also be promoted, the professor of human nutrition said.
Protein Challenge is the tag of The Nigeria Protein Awareness Campaign, a protein pull media campaign that seeks to create awareness about the prevalence, status and impact of protein deficiency in Nigeria.
The campaign aligns with the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 2 – Zero Hunger – which seeks to end hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture.

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

How MVNOs Can Unlock Opportunities in Nigeria’s Telecom Amid Challenges

 By Elvis Eromosele Phenomenal is one word that has been...

SanlamAllianz Nigeria Wins Africa’s Most Visible Insurance Company Award

L-R: Marketing and Corporate Communications Manager, SanlamAllianz Nigeria, Mr....

Nigerian Stocks Present Buying Opportunities as Market Sheds N2.8trn

Nigeria's equities market closed last week ending November 7...

ICPC Chair, Musa Aliyu, to Deliver Realnews 13th Anniversary Lecture 2025

Dr. Musa Adamu Aliyu (SAN) Chairman ICPC THE Management of Realnews Magazine...

Our Laws Now Stronger, More Effective to Prosecute Parties at Fault in Bank Failure – NDIC Boss

COURTESY VISIT: Managing Director/CE, Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC),...

Topics

VBank Leads Discourse on Innovative Payment Systems at 2021 Nigeria Fintech Week

L-R (Mudiaga Umukoro, CEO Appzone Core; Akeem Lawal, Divisional...

Nigeria Ranks 44 in Africa Peaceful Country Index

Mauritius, according to the Global Peace Index 2016 published...

GOCOP 2025: Conference on Governance Challenges, Prospects Set for October 9

The Guild of Corporate Online Publishers (GOCOP) has announced...

Atiku to Launch Aaron’s Book: Nigeria DRIVERS OF DIGITAL PROSPERITY

Nigeria’s former Vice-President, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar will on Thursday, July...

TSA: CBN Sanctions UBA N2.9bn, First Bank N1.8bn

These are bad times for United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc and First Bank Limited as both were sanctioned by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to the tune of N2.9 billion and N1.8 billion respectively for allegedly violating the Treasury Single Account (TSA) policy of the Federal Government. For First Bank, its shares nosedived to 10-year low as a result of the N1.88 billion sanction by the CBN. The bank’s shares fell by 3.9% to N5 in trading at the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), its lowest fall since April 2005.

NAIPCO 2022 Confab: The Importance of SMEs in Micro Insurance, Pension

As the November 3, 2022 date for the Annual National Conference...

NIA Chairman, Kunle Ahmed, Unveils 5-Point Agenda to Drive Market Growth

Mr. Kunle Ahmed, Chairman, Nigerian Insurers Association (NIA) has...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img