Tue, 21-Oct-2025

Malnutrition early in life linked to poor growth: Study

Malnutrition
  •  More than a million children die each year due to wasting.
  • Malnutrition affects babies much earlier than thought.
  • More nutritional support is needed for mothers to-be.

KARACHI:  Better nutrition during pregnancy and childbearing years is critical in protecting children in their most vulnerable first 1,000 days, study finds.

Malnutrition affects babies much earlier than thought, and more nutritional support is needed for mothers to-be and their newborns to prevent disease, impaired cognition and death, according to new findings by Prof Zulfiqar Bhutta, founding director of the Institute for Global Health and Development and the Centre of Excellence in Women and Child Health (COE-WCH) at the Aga Khan University.

In a trio of papers published by the Nature’s Ki Child Growth Consortium, which comprises of researchers at UC San Francisco and UC Berkeley, Prof Bhutta examines how malnutrition affects growth in the first two years of life, underscoring a devastating reality for millions of children in the Global South, particularly Asia. Stunting, or being too short for their age, indicates chronic malnutrition, while wasting measures acute malnutrition. The global health community uses both indications to monitor progress toward ending malnutrition.

The analysis involved an international team of more than 100 researchers that examined data on nearly 84,000 children under two years old from 33 major studies that began between 1987 and 2014. The cohorts came from 15 countries in South Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America and Eastern Europe.

It was discovered that in 2022, more than one in five children around the world – nearly 150 million – did not get enough calories to grow normally, and more than 45 million showed signs of wasting, or weighing too little for their height.

More than a million children die each year as a consequence of wasting and more than 250,000 die from stunting. “People who experienced stunting and wasting in childhood may also experience worse cognitive development, which translates into worse economic outcomes as adults”, remarked Prof Bhutta while discussing his breakthrough research.

Appreciating the monumental findings by Prof Bhutta and his team of AKU-based researchers, President AKU, Sulaiman Shahabuddin said, “AKU is stepping up on the global stage to share its portfolio of accomplished researchers and analysts who can help formulate robust policies in child and maternal healthcare. The COE-WCH deserves its due appreciation in contributing generously to this global effort.”

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AKU is trusted partner of Sindh Govt in health and education sector: CM    

AKU
  • He said while speaking on the occasion of AKU Founder’s Day.
  • He said Sindh Govt is working closely with AKU in health care.
  • The CM offered heartiest felicitations to the graduates.

KARACHI: Chief Minister Sindh Syed Murad Ali Shah has said that Aga Khan University(AKU) has been a trusted partner of Sindh government for  decades but in recent years, the partnership has proven its value like never before.

“At the start of the pandemic, when Pakistan was recording its first cases of the virus, there were so many unknowns, there were so many questions in need of answers at that difficult time, therefore expertise of AKU was invaluable.”

This he said while speaking on the occasion of Agha Khan University Founder’s Day – the 40th Anniversary, and the Convocation of the Class of 2022 at Aga Khan University.

Mr Shah said that AKU has been a trusted and great partner of his government. “At the  start of the pandemic, when Pakistan was recording its first cases of the virus, there were so many unknowns and so many questions in need of answers,” he said and added at that difficult time, the expertise of AKU was invaluable and it was so willing to share its knowledge even in the middle of the night, there was always someone from the University available to assist us.

Murad Shah said that as the case count of COVID-19 rose, and it became clear we needed to provide additional training to our doctors and nurses in caring for seriously ill Covid patients, we naturally turned to AKU.

The CM recalled that throughout the pandemic, his government relied on AKU for data on the spread of the virus and the arrival of new strains.

Murad Shah said that he could recount many more examples of AKU addressing important health and education issues in partnership with the public sector-from increasing access to vaccination in underserved areas of Karachi, to training teachers in rural Sindh.

The CM said he would be working  closely with AKU to bring outstanding health care and education to the people of Sindh and Pakistan.

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GB Govt and AKU to collaborate on nursing education and healthcare

GB Govt and
  • Gilgit-Baltistan will produce over 5,000 nurses in the next five years.
  • Chief Minister expressed his keen interest in the services provided by AKUH.
  •  CM announced that the GB government will work with AKUH.

KARACHI: Nurses are the backbone of healthcare systems and Government of Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) is committed to establishing a nursing college in Gilgit and producing over 5,000 nurses in the next five years.

This was stated by GB Chief Minister Khalid Khurshid Khan while talking to Dr Sulaiman Shahabuddin, President of Aga Khan University (AKU) and other officials while visiting the University campus in Karachi.

“AKU’s School of Nursing and Midwifery is the first nursing institution to be affiliated with a university and a benchmark for nursing and midwifery education in Pakistan. We appreciate Chief Minister Khan’s vision for nursing education and assure him our support in this regard,” said AKU President Dr Shahabuddin.

It was mutually agreed to set up a task force, with representatives from GB government and AKU, which will recommend the way forward within a month.

While visiting the campus, Chief Minister Khan expressed his keen interest in the services provided by Aga Khan University Hospital (AKUH) and AKU’s Centre for Innovation in Medical Education, a state-of-the-art facility for simulation-based learning for health professionals.

He announced that the GB government will work with AKUH as part of the Chief Minister Health Endowment Fund to help deserving patients from GB to receive high-quality healthcare at the Hospital.

 

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