Life 3 - Seeing is Believing
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
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Health experts have long known that a lack of Vitamin A can lead to serious complications and diseases during childhood - such as measles and blindness - as well as increasing the risk of child and maternal mortality, thus undermining the health and development of poor countries. The problem facing health workers and government ministries, therefore, has been how to deliver supplemental Vitamin A to populations most at risk, and how to help those populations understand the vital role it can play in protecting health.
Guatemala pioneered the fortification of sugar with Vitamin A, and their success has influenced the country of Zambia and the launch of a new, nationwide program to ensure that Vitamin A reaches all of its people. But as this episode of LIFE shows, sugar fortification is just one part of a multi-pronged strategy that also includes experiments with the fortification of corn in local mills, administering Vitamin A supplements in mother-and-child clinics, and the cultivation of new varieties of high-yield palm trees that provide Vitamin A-rich palm oil.
With the support of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF).
Citation
Main credits
Walker, Christopher (film director)
Walker, Christopher (screenwriter)
Richards, Jenny (editor of moving image work)
Khachooni, Lara (editor of moving image work)
Kunda, Simon (on-screen participant)
Mubanga, Freddie (on-screen participant)
Mukukwa, James (on-screen participant)
Siamusantu, Ward (on-screen participant)
Kayembe, Don (on-screen participant)
Goings, Stella (on-screen participant)
Other credits
Series editor, Jenny Richards; editor, Lara Khachooni.
Distributor subjects
African Studies; Anthropology; Community; Developing World; Economics; Food And Nutrition; Geography; Globalization; Health; Humanities; Sociology; United Nations; Urban StudiesKeywords
WEBVTT
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[sil.]
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When there is a common interest
and if it is the health,
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and if everybody is united to do
something, then it is not difficult.
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People believed that the reason
for night blindness is -
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if you kick the chicken\'s cage. There\'s a
difference between expecting communities
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to pay for those services as opposed to actually
getting involved with government systems.
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[music]
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[music]
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On Lake Mweru, in Zambia\'s Northern Luapula province,
fishermen are bringing in the day\'s catch.
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[music]
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But for local people, a plentiful diet
of fish has had unexpected consequences.
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A survey showed
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that 57% of blind people in Zambia
come from Luapula province.
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The cause lack of vitamin A - a
lethal public health problem
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which also has a significant effect
on child deaths as well as increasing
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the risks to women dying in childbirth.
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On the shores of Lake Mweru,
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Dr. Kunda runs a child health clinic
serving the fishermen\'s families.
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People here regard fish as their
only nutritious type of food,
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so they deprive the children
of other foodstuffs,
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giving priority to fish.
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Dietary supplements are so
low, most of the mothers
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go for field work in the morning,
they come back very late,
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so feeding is compromised.
We usually detect
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that when there is diarrhea
and when a patient comes
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with eye problems that\'s
when we see that surely
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there is a vitamin A deficiency.
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The impact of vitamin A deficiency,
it has brought in high
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mortality and morbidity.
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We need to encourage these mothers to be
giving their children vitamin A supplements.
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As you can see, if you look at the conjunctive
of the child, it\'s very, very red.
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You see? So measles also affects the eye.
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So it\'s very easy for these children, especially
if they are malnourished, to get blind.
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[music]
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In Zambia\'s capital, Lusaka,
Freddie Mubanga is responsible
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for increasing vitamin A intake - both in Luapula
Province, and throughout the whole country.
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We started investigating
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the micronutrient deficiencies in
1995 where we undertook a survey
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in one of the provinces,
Luapula, which had recorded
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high levels of blindness. It
was found that about 16.2%
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of children 6 to 72 months had
subclinical vitamin A deficiency.
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That, of course, gave way to start thinking
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of some strategies to see how we can
reduce the levels of deficiencies.
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[music]
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Since the 1995 survey, Zambia has implemented vitamin
supplements for children at child health clinics -
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both throughout the country,
and in the capital Lusaka.
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George has got a very big catchment
area and we see a lot of children.
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It\'s a really highly-populated place.
Yes. And it\'s a very busy clinic.
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We have a lot of underweights,
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malnourished children.
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We give vitamin A to the under fives.
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[sil.]
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So I think for my baby to be healthy, I
need to be coming here to get medicine
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for her to be protected
from various diseases.
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[sil.]
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Breastfeeding is the best.
And it\'s cheap, very cheap!
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You can buy vegetables, you eat,
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when the baby feeds she gets all the nutrients.
It\'s very cheap - in fact. I like it.
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[sil.]
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Yes, they can get it through breastfeeding, yes. In case they don\'t
get enough through the foods, then we supplement at the clinic
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by giving them vitamin A capsules.
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[sil.]
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Following the national survey on vitamin
A deficiency in 1997, we realized
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that the problem is so immense. So
we had to look at other options.
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In addition to supplementation, we thought
of moving into sugar fortification.
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We looked around what
food vehicles we can use,
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and sugar seemed to be the one
that was produced centrally
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and it was found in almost
every part of the country.
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To add vitamin A to sugar, the
government needed the co-operation
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of Zambia Sugar - a private corporation
and the country\'s sole producer.
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It was a program that was introduced
by the government to the industry -
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so it was very new to us. We knew literally
nothing. People working with the government,
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they had contacts in Guatemala
who were really the…
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the founders of VA fortification of sugar.
So the best way
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to undertake that project was to
go to the source, to the experts.
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And me being the production manager, I had to
go there, because eventually I had to come
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and implement that project.
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Zambia Sugar agreed to help out
with the national health problem
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that the whole country faced -
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as a sign of goodwill. So it\'s
actually doing it for free.
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The company bears the cost.
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[sil.]
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It\'s very expensive. Every year we spend
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almost a million dollars
to buy the VA - vitamin A.
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[sil.]
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USAID has also been a major supporter - and
initiator - of the sugar fortification program.
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[sil.]
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Since we implemented the fortification
program at Zambia Sugar in 1998,
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we\'ve had several delegations
coming from other countries -
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Uganda, South Africa, Malawi and
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Kenya last year. They\'ve been here
to enquire and to familiarize
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themselves with the VA fortification,
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with a view of them also
going the same way.
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[music]
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It may cost a million dollars a year
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to fortify all of Zambia\'s sugar with
vitamin A, but the cost per bag of sugar
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is just a few cents. And even
that pales into insignificance
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when you add in the number of lives saved and the huge
health benefits of vitamin A fortification for all Zambians.
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[music]
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Last year actually the Zambian
Government passed regulations
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to say all the sugar that has to be…
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that has to be consumed in households
has to be fortified with vitamin A.
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Since we started enforcing that,
the border areas - in Zimbabwe,
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and in Namibia, Botswana and so forth -
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their sugar is still coming in. You know,
so it becomes a bit difficult to enforce,
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or to control, the influx of this. But all the
sugar that enters through the border points,
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it has to conform to the regulations.
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[sil.]
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This is brown sugar coming from Zimbabwe.
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Now we\'ve got one truck
carrying sugar, brown sugar,
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30 metric tons, yes, from Zimbabwe.
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[music]
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When the truck comes which is carrying sugar
from Zimbabwe or South Africa, we take samples.
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When we get the primary samples,
we submit them to Lusaka
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for further analysis at the
food and drugs laboratory.
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We have the food and drugs regulations,
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where the levels of vitamin A in sugar are
stated. So we make sure that from the analysis,
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we check whether the levels
do conform to the standard.
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[sil.]
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We receive the samples
from all over the country.
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We also get samples from Zambia Sugar company
itself. Part of their quality control program
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is actually to bring the
samples here for analysis.
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We discovered that some samples of sugar
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was indicating there was no vitamin A. But when they were
analyzed at the factory, they were finding some vitamin A.
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But after storage, the levels
of vitamin A were going down,
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until at one point we were finding
actually a zero. From that time on,
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there\'s been regular sampling to make
sure that problem does not occur again.
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We have to keep on, you know, checking
on the quality of food, because
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we can\'t relax and say, \"Well, since we\'ve been testing so
far, maybe now we should stop.\" No, it\'s an ongoing process.
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Although fortification of sugar
has been a success in Zambia,
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it reaches only 52% of the
population in comparison
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to Zambia\'s staple food maize, or
mshima, which is consumed by over 90%.
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We felt that probably we need to diversify
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the food base for fortification.
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And one sort of food that we thought of was
maize, because it\'s highly consumed in Zambia.
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[music]
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In Lusaka\'s Chawama Township,
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government scientists are testing adding of vitamin
A supplements to maize at the local Hammer Mill.
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[sil.]
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Unlike sugar which is produced
at one single source,
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40% of maize produced in Zambia
is ground in local mills
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used by people in poor
urban and rural areas.
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[sil.]
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Simple methods had to be
found to ensure local people
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would mix vitamin A into
their own maize meal.
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[sil.]
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[music]
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While Zambia has expanded fortification
of foodstuffs with vitamin A,
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evaluating its impact can be difficult.
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It\'s ideal to do the impact study now
because the baseline was done in 1997,
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and now it\'s almost like six
years - we could actually find
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what has been happening. However, we
have malnutrition levels very high.
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We have HIV problems we\'re going through. It will
be very difficult to actually to tease out which…
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which component has… has
vitamin A supplementation
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has actually affected our population.
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It\'s very difficult,
because the… the amounts
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that are put in sugar are very minimal,
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so you need to… At the same time as you are looking at fortification,
you have also to look at dietary levels, which might take longer.
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It\'s one of the most
important things to follow.
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Let\'s change our people\'s diets so that we don\'t
even bother of fortifying, supplementing.
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From the diet they could eat, you
could have a lot of vitamin A.
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[sil.]
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Back in Luapula province, nutritionists
00:17:20.000 --> 00:17:24.999
are working on improving people\'s diet and preventing
future cases of blindness, illness and death.
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Even us as nutritionists, we are
promoting that you can take fruit,
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you can take vegetables, for vitamin A. But
as long as there\'s no presence of oil,
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so it can\'t be absorbed by the body.
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These palm oil trees are imported
by the project from Costa Rica.
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We brought them because naturally there are along the Luapula
Valley. We have got the traditional ones. So those ones,
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they are not bearing much fruit and even the fruit which
are received, they are not giving us much oil as expected.
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So these improved seeds, they
are helping to give us more
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and more oil from one bunch. When
they grow, after at least one year -
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when they come like this
ones – so we put them now…
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we start now giving out to the communities. Now the
communities - there are some who are accessing them
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at very low cost, just to promote
this and to give them the ownership.
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So far I think we\'ve distributed 57,000.
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And we\'ve imported so far could be 65,000
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or so since we started in 1997.
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It takes four years for
the palms to bear fruit.
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In local villages women have
been learning to make palm oil.
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Mrs. Eskembene
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of Sensima village was sent to Ghana
to study palm oil production.
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[non-English narration]
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We used to process palm oil before,
but for no particular reason.
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Sometimes people would use it, others not.
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But after we knew the benefits of it,
we decided to increase production.
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[non-English narration]
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Zambians were quick to realize that
vitamin A deficiency was contributing
00:20:30.000 --> 00:20:34.999
to an intolerably high rate
of morbidity and mortality,
00:20:35.000 --> 00:20:39.999
especially for children, and they were also quick
to understand the importance of supplementation,
00:20:40.000 --> 00:20:44.999
fortification and diversification programs.
Zambia is a country that is confronting
00:20:45.000 --> 00:20:49.999
a food crisis this year.
This is forcing government
00:20:50.000 --> 00:20:54.999
to reconsider the way they look at food in the way they
handle food. A part of this, and we hope that UNICEF
00:20:55.000 --> 00:20:59.999
will play a very active role. We will be making certain that mothers
and people who are in charge of providing food for the household,
00:21:00.000 --> 00:21:04.999
first are equipped to establish
and maintain household gardens
00:21:05.000 --> 00:21:09.999
and that we provide the
education that\'s necessary for,
00:21:10.000 --> 00:21:14.999
so that they know how to prepare the foods.
00:21:15.000 --> 00:21:23.000
[sil.]
00:21:25.000 --> 00:21:29.999
Back at Dr. Kunda\'s clinic, mothers are now taking cooking
classes to learn how to prepare vitamin-rich foods.
00:21:30.000 --> 00:21:34.999
We\'ve started a program
where we encourage mothers
00:21:35.000 --> 00:21:39.999
to be using the local valuable foods -
00:21:40.000 --> 00:21:44.999
like green vegetables, yellow
fruits like paw-paw, oranges.
00:21:45.000 --> 00:21:49.999
And here we are lucky because
we have these palm trees.
00:21:50.000 --> 00:21:54.999
Now research has discovered that these
things are very rich in vitamin A.
00:21:55.000 --> 00:21:59.999
So we are encouraging mothers to
be using the oil from palm trees.
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[non-English narration]
00:22:05.000 --> 00:22:09.999
For the people of Luapula
Province, adding vitamin A
00:22:10.000 --> 00:22:14.999
to their fish diet now promises
a healthier, brighter future.
00:22:15.000 --> 00:22:23.000
[non-English narration]
00:23:10.000 --> 00:23:18.000
[sil.]