Thumbnail Image

Policy Brief. Combatting micronutrient deficiencies through home gardens in Sri Lanka









​FAO. 2019. Policy Brief. Combatting micronutrient deficiencies through home gardens in Sri Lanka. Colombo. 8 pg. CC-BY-NC-SA IGO 3.0


Also available in:
No results found.

Related items

Showing items related by metadata.

  • Thumbnail Image
    Book (stand-alone)
    Home gardens key to improved nutritional well-being 2006
    Also available in:
    No results found.

    FAO recognizes that healthy, well-nourished people are both the outcome of successful social and economic development and constitute an essential input to the development process. Achieving nutrition related goals requires that national and sectoral development policies and programmes are complemented by effective community-based action aimed at improving household food security and promoting the year-round consumption of nutritionally adequate diets. These activities are being actively pursued by FAO as part of its field programme. This report provides an account of one such pilot project in the Lao People's Democratic Republic. The objective was to promote integrated home gardening, including small livestock and aquaculture. The project activities targeted poor and food-insecure families with under-five-year-old children with moderate or severe undernourishment. Post-project evaluations found increased production of vegetables, fruits, poultry and fish among the targeted households a nd a decline in the rates of undernutrition in children under five years of age. The project demonstrates an effective and sustainable method for improving nutritional standards of low income rural families through integrated household food production, which can be extended to the national level.
  • Thumbnail Image
    Book (stand-alone)
    Combating Micronutrient Deficiencies: Food-based Approaches 2010
    Also available in:
    No results found.

    Micronutrient deficiencies affect more than two billion people in the world today. With long-ranging effects on health, learning ability and productivity they contribute to the vicious cycle of malnutrition, underdevelopment and poverty. Food-based approaches, which include food production, dietary diversification and food fortification, are sustainable strategies for improving the micronutrient status of populations and raising levels of nutrition. Combating Micronutrient Deficiencies: Food-bas ed Approaches focuses on practical, sustainable actions for overcoming micronutrient deficiencies through increased availability, access to and consumption of adequate quantities and appropriate varieties of safe, good quality food. The volume brings together the available knowledge, success stories and lessons learned to demonstrate that foodbased approaches are viable, sustainable and long-term solutions to overcoming micronutrient malnutrition. This booklet is a summary of the publication and contains the abstracts and the list of key words for each chapter. Combating Micronutrient Deficiencies: Food-based Approaches is a useful resource for policymakers, agronomists, food and nutrition security planners, programme implementers and health workers.
  • Thumbnail Image
    Project
    Promoting Home and School Gardens in Bangladesh, the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Myanmar, Nepal and Timor-Leste - TCP/RAS/3509 2019
    Also available in:
    No results found.

    Nutrition, food security and the elimination of hunger as a meansto achieve overall economic development are priority issues in Asiaand the Pacific, and there is growing recognition of the influence ofnutritional status on schoolchildren’s health, growth and development.One of the easiest ways to ensure access to a healthy diet is foodproduction in home or school gardens, which can further contributeto combatting hunger, poverty and illiteracy. Although many casestudies of school gardens show their contribution to reducing hungerand improving nutrition, a lack of support from national policies orstrategies has limited and scale and expansion of these practices.Therefore, as part of the Zero Hunger Challenge, this project aimedto develop sustainable, practical and replicable models for schoolgarden-based learning and home gardens in Bangladesh, the LaoPeople’s Democratic Republic, Myanmar, Nepal and Timor-Leste.

Users also downloaded

Showing related downloaded files

No results found.