Archive for year: 2020
Thursday 2 April 2020
Time (1hour): 10:00a NY/Boston, 3:00p London, 4:00p Rome, 5:00p Addis, 7:30p Delhi
Panelists:
- Tesfaye Hailu, Ethiopian Public Health Institute: brings the topic to the floor and outlines key questions and concerns, particularly focusing on Africa.
- Selena Ahmed, Montana State University: shares lessons learned from the current situation in China, where she researches food environments.
- Will Masters, Tufts University: discusses economic aspects of how supply chains and markets could change and what can keep them functioning.
- Denise Costa Coitinho, UN SCN: presents a summary of SCN's analysis of food environments disruptions by COVID-19, highlighting some resources and examples of actions taken to mitigate the consequences; and what UN agencies are proposing to respond to the crisis.
- Moderator: Anna Herforth, Ag2Nut, will outline the reason for coming together, what we know about nutrition and disease interactions, and how we can use our discussion to act and speak with one voice.
VACANT POSITION
Title: REACH National Facilitator
Contract type: National Facilitator (mid-level)
Duration: 4 Months (1st April 2020 – 31st July 2020)
Duty Station: Harare, Zimbabwe
The UN Network in Zimbabwe seeks the services of a National Facilitator to support REACH activities in 2020. The REACH Facilitator will work under the dual supervision of the Director of FNC and the Chair of the UN Network in consultation with the other UN Network Heads of agencies. The REACH National Facilitator will provide oversight to the implementation of the REACH-UN Country Implementation Plan (CIP). He/she will be responsible for the following duties:
- Support to Advocacy and Awareness raising for nutrition
- Strategic planning and analysis of broader food and nutrition security issues in Zimbabwe
- Support the strengthening of food and nutrition Multi-sectoral/Multi-stakeholder Coordination mechanisms
- Support the UN nutrition strengthening initiatives
- Coordinate work and mission of REACH in-country;
Qualifications & Experience Required
Education: A University degree in public policy or administration, management, public health, nutrition, agriculture, or related field.
Experience:
- At least 3-5 years of professional post degree experience in managing nutrition, food security, public health programs, policy processes;
- Experience in managing multi-parties and multi-sector working groups including governments, donors and CSOs is an asset
- Technical background in nutrition, food security, and/or health; OR technical background in management and change management;
- Strong action management and teamwork skills: ability to establish priorities and to plan, coordinate and monitor own work plan and those relevant to the team and partners; ability to follow up deadlines; accuracy and attention to details and high-quality deliverables; and
- Excellent communications and interpersonal skills; ability to influence and interact with senior level decision-makers across different organizations and cultures; to act with credibility, tact and diplomacy on sensitive issues and discussions.
Interested applicants, kindly send your application with proof of qualifications & CV to the FNC Deputy Director (ymavhunga@localhost or yvonnemavhunga@gmail.com) by the 8th of April 2020
The UNICEF, WHO and the World Bank inter-agency team update the joint global and regional estimates of malnutrition among children under 5 years of age each year. These estimates of prevalence and numbers affected for child stunting, overweight, wasting and severe wasting are derived for the global population as well as by regional groupings of United Nations (UN) regions and sub-regions, Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), UNICEF, WHO and World Bank regions, as well as World Bank country-income group classifications.
31 March - 2 April 2020
Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre
Queensland Australia
WORLD PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION CONGRESS 2020
Knowledge, Policy, Action in the Decade of Nutrition 2016-2025
What is working or not? Where are the gaps? What needs more effort or change?
Held every 4 years, the World Public Health Nutrition Congress was established by the World Public Health Nutrition Association (WPHNA) to bring together the international public health nutrition sector for an international congress free from funding from conflicted sources. The Congress acts as a pathway to strengthen the knowledge base, partnerships and commitment for effective action to improve nutrition related health, particularly among vulnerable populations in the world.
The Congress was first held in Rio, Brazil in 2012 then in Cape Town, South Africa in 2016 and in 2020 the World Public Health Nutrition Congress will be brought to Australia for the first time and hosted by the Public Health Association of Australia (PHAA).
Call for Abstracts - deadline for submission Sunday 21 July 2019, at 11:59pm AEST
#WPHNCongress2020
Impacts and positive policy actions to deliver sustainable healthy diets for all
Last updated by the UNSCN Secretariat on 8th April
Food environments are rapidly changing
The current global pandemic of Coronavirus (COVID-19), and measures taken to reduce its spread, have disrupted food environments around the world. Never has a larger spotlight been placed on the ways people meet the food systems for getting the nutrition they, and their family need. Disarrangements in day-to-day food supply mechanisms and disturbances in various components of food systems are increasingly felt on an individual level.
These disruptions to people’s food environments and restrictions to their personal freedom give even more reason to ensure that human rights are not being compromised in the long term. Everyone has the right to adequate food and the right to health. Realizing and protecting the human rights of every man, woman and child is essential at all times, including during times of crises.
As the pandemic spreads the interaction between people and the food system is changing at an unimaginable speed and taking on greater importance in everyday life. With strict rules placed on people's personal movement to limit the spread of COVID-19, shopping for food is one of the only points of contact with what people knew as normal life. Even so, supermarkets, grocers and markets have become a confronting barometer of the scale of the pandemic. Physical distancing measures are implemented, marketplaces are shut down, vendors are banned from selling, limits are imposed on the number of shoppers, long queues are encountered at points of food purchase and empty shelves serve as a sign of the coping mechanism many are adopting.
Unhealthy diets are the leading cause of ill-health. Without dedicated action on nutrition, all forms of malnutrition are likely to increase as a result of the pandemic’s impact on food environments. Financial hardships, reduced physical activity, and altered purchasing patterns favoring products with longer shelf life and often poorer nutrition profiles can lead to higher levels of food insecurity, undernutrition, and overweight/ obesity.
Food environment disruptions are the result of many more changes than those observed at the point of sale. Both external and personal dimensions impact on people’s food environments. External dimensions include food availability, prices, vendors- while personal dimensions include geographical access, affordability, convenience and desirability.
Figure 1. Possible impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on food environments
Source: adapted from Turner et al, Concepts and critical perspectives for food environment research: A global framework with implications for action in low- and middle-income countries, available at https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211912418300154?via%3DihubSpecific examples of positive policy actions to mitigate changes and improve food environments
Many governments at all levels, as well as civil society organizations and the private sector, are already applying positive policy actions to protect food environments. The objective is to try and adapt to unavoidable changes and support sustainable healthy diets for all.
Some examples of actions taken are detailed below:
External Food Environment Domains
- Promote the smooth and secure flow of food trade in support of food security and nutrition;
- Support and protect smallholder farmers and their value chains/ market access;
- Support the continuation of planting and harvesting cycles to prevent agricultural production disruptions
- Utilize Food Based Dietary Guideline’s (FBDG) which include sustainability criteria to inform positive action by all stakeholders throughout the food system- from guiding agricultural and food production strategies, to informing policy makers priorities and promoting sustainable healthy diets;
- Support local food systems, through linking them with major food supply chains;
- Monitor food prices, food security and malnutrition indicators;
- Adopt subsidies and taxes which promote the purchasing and consumption of nutritious foods based on food based dietary guidelines (FBDG);
- Strengthen and adapt social protection programmes in light of price fluctuations, income losses and nutritional needs to protect the right to food for all, leaving no one behind;
- Include food system and food supply chain actors as essential services to ensure availability, while protecting workers with sanitary measures;
- Upkeep of food fortification programmes;
- Support major food providers to undertake needs-based purchasing that ensures the availability of basic food items, including fresh fruits and vegetables.
Personal Food Environment Domains
- Adapt the delivery of social protection programmes to improve accessibility and affordability in a manner that complies with movement and crowd restrictions, harnesses volunteers and creates employment opportunities;
- Explore food rationing systems based on health, nutrition, equity and decency that protects the right to food for all
- Use FBDG’s as a guide to the promotion of sustainable healthy diets and to guide policy actions throughout the food system
- Strengthen nutrition education and messaging to protect breastfeeding and promote nutritious food products, dispel myths, encourage healthy cooking techniques and place emphasis on food safety and waste reduction in line with the latest nutritional advice;
- Invest in, scale-up and explore digital and other innovative and solidary approaches for food provision and grocery shopping platforms to enhance convenience; reach vulnerable populations; and improve wholesale markets, smallholder farmers and local producers’ access to larger points of sale and consumers;
- Support local government level action to strengthen food supply and food environments – including those that look to improve accessibility through home delivery of food for vulnerable populations and create employment opportunities.
Policy actions during the COVID-19 should be human rights based – aiming to protect every person’s right to food, reducing inequalities and ensuring even the most vulnerable groups needs are met, leaving no one behind.
Nutritional advice during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Nutritional advice does not change because of the pandemic, but it does take on added urgency:
- Consult trustworthy information sources such as UN agencies and government health/ nutrition platforms.
- A healthy dietary pattern based on national or regional FBDG which is diverse and abundant with fruits and vegetables, wholegrains, nuts, and seeds; plain water, modest amounts of animal source foods and minimal in amounts of processed meats is important to ensure all bodily functions work well, including immunity.
- Unhealthy diets, leading to overweight and obesity, are the leading cause of ill health and non-communicable diseases (NCDs) including diabetes, heart disease, cancer and chronic respiratory disease. Unhealthy diets are also a primary cause of poor control of NCDs and resulting adverse health outcomes. People with NCDs are at a heightened risk of becoming severely ill with COVID-19.
- Watch your intake of fats, sugar, and salt. Many people in times of high stress, use foods high in fat, sugar and salt as a comfort, which can lead to over eating and weight gain.
- Faced with fear and uncertainty it is natural to be tempted by tales of miracle foods. No food, drink or dietary pattern can provide protection from, or cure infection by COVID-19.
- Food safety is crucial to limit both the spread of COVID-19 and exposure to other illnesses. Practice handwashing with soap before and after grocery shopping, handling, preparing and consuming food.
- Prevent food waste by only purchasing what you and your family need and following the 9 easy tips to fight food waste.
- Practice solidarity. Avoid panic purchasing and enjoy home-cooked meals. Where possible and safe, help the vulnerable with their food purchases and support local food producers and vendors.
- Breastfeeding protects newborns from getting sick and also helps protect them throughout their infancy and childhood. Breastfeeding is particularly effective against infectious diseases because it strengthens the immune system by directly transferring antibodies from the mother. Women with COVID-19 can continue to breastfeed if they practice respiratory hygiene during feeding.
Working towards a healthier, more nutritious future
The current COVID-19 generated food environment disruption poses a huge global challenge, but also an opportunity. Mitigating its consequences with collaborative solutions, solidarity and reinforcement of local food systems, may open up and lead the way towards a sustainable transformation to resilient and sustainable food systems with healthy nutrition at their core. FBDG form a useful tool to guide this transformation. People are searching for direction and reassurances in their food environments that realize the right to food for every man, woman and child. Now is the time to demonstrate the need for, and the power and possibility of sustainable healthy diets.
Overall actions and recommendations by the UN to protect health and nutrition
UN agencies and their partner organizations are continuously scaling up action and information to protect people’s health and nutrition in this time of crisis (see a full list of resources here).
Take our short questionnaire on the impacts of COVID-19 on our everyday life. It will only take 5 minutes of your time and it is available in several languages! It is open until Friday 24 April 2020.
The global outbreak of Coronavirus (COVID-19) has disrupted food systems around the world. Food environments are where people meet the food system. Around the world people’s food environments are rapidly changing in both their external dimensions – food availability, prices, vendors- as well as personal dimensions – geographical access, affordability, convenience and desirability. These rapid food environment changes are influencing the consumers’ dietary practices and can lead to a deterioration in both individual, and country level,nutritional and health status.
People, and their health and nutrition status, are what counts. Sustainable healthy diets that contain sufficient fruits and vegetables are crucial in protecting people’s immunity. Particularly for those at risk of, or suffering from food insecurity and those with pre-existing non-communicable diseases who are at a heightened risk of becoming severely ill with the virus.
The work of UN agencies and partner organizations to promote nutrition and healthy food systems during the pandemic is continually expanding and strengthening. Contributing to the coronavirus pandemic response, the UNSCN has compiled a list of available resources and key readings with a focus on nutrition and food systems. This list will be continually updated and expanded as more resources become available.
Click to download a PDF version of this list.
UN AGENCIES GENERAL RESPONSE
- UN: Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) (Continually updated);
UNSG Policy briefs
UNSG Policy brief: The Impact of COVID-19 on Food Security and Nutrition
UNSG Report Shared repsonsability, global solidarity: responding to the socio-economic impacts of COVID-19 (March 2020)
- WHO: COVID-19 pandemic (Continually updated)
Latest updates on COVID-19 including daily press releases, country and technical guidance, advice for the public and research updates.
WHO Manifesto for a Healthy Recovery from COVID-19: Six key perscriptions and actionables for a healthy recovery
- WFP: Emergency Response and Situation Reports (Continually updated)
Latest updates on WFP’s response to COVID-19, key links and situation reports. - UNICEF: COVID-19 – what you need to know about the virus to protect you and your family (Continually updated)
Latest news and fact based information on COVID-19, including advice for parents, teens, teachers and employees. Latest updates on Nutrition related programming, technical advise and information birefs can be found in 'Nutrition- COVID-19'.
Maternal and Child Nutrition: UNICEF Programming Priorities to Respond to the Socio-Economic Impacts of the COVID-19 Pandemic
- FAO: COVID-19 Outbreak (Continually updated)
An overview of FAO’s action in regard to the outbreak, key messages, policy tools, questions and answers. FAO's component of the Global COVID-19 Humanitarian Response Plan to address the impact of COVID-19 in food crises can be downloaded here.
- UNOPS: Dedicated COVID-19 page (Continually updated)
- UN Network on Migration COVID-19 page (Continually updated)
- UNRWA: UNRWA Responds to COVID19 (Continually updated)
- IFAD: Dedicated COVID-19 page (Continually updated)
- OCHA: Global humanitarian response plan COVID-19 (25 March)
Prepared by members of the Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC), including UN, other international organizations and NGOs with a humanitarian mandate, to analyse and respond to the direct public health and indirect immediate humanitarian consequences of the pandemic, particularly on people in countries already facing other crises. - UNDP: COVID-19 pandemic
Drawing on the experience with other outbreaks such as Ebola, HIV, SARS, TB and malaria, as well as their long history of working with the private and public sector, UNDP will help countries to urgently and effectively respond to COVID-19 as part of its mission to eradicate poverty, reduce inequalities and build resilience to crises and shocks. - UNEP: UNEP Statement on COVID-19
- FAO, IFAD, WFP and the World Bank: Joint Statement on COVID-19 Impacts on Food Security and Nutrition, on the occassion of the Extraordinary G20 Agricultual Ministers Meeting (21 April)
- UNIATF Nutrition Thematic Working Group:
Strengthened Action on Nutrition in the COVID-19 Response (31 July) A joint advocacy piece for putting healthy, afordable and sustainable diets at the heart of the COVID-19 response, supported by the session session on 'Nourishing the Post COVID-19 World' on Nov 13th.
IMPACT ASSESSMENTS
- Global Network Against Food Crises and FSIN. 2020 Global Report on Food Crises update: In times of COVID-19. A joint update on how COVID-19 is contributing to the perpetuation or deterioration of the main drivers of acute hunger. (Oct 9th)
- Standing Together for Nutrition Consortium: estimates on the impact of COVID-19 on childhood malnutrition and nutrition-related mortality, and recommendations for action. (27th July)
- SOFI 2020. The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World Report 2020 - Transforming food systems for affordable healthy diets. Box 3 details how the COVID-19 pandemic may affect hunger in the world.
FOOD SYSTEMS
- UNSCN:
- COVID-19 pandemic: The evolving impact on how people meet the food system (May 29th)
- Food Environments in the COVID-19 Pandemic: Impacts and positive policy actions to deliver sustainable healthy diets for all (27 March)
- FAO
- Addressing the impacts of COVID-19 in food crises, Humanitarian Liaison Working Group (4 May)
Presentations:
- Coronavirus Food Supply Chain Under Strain What to do? (24 March)
- Video: Food Supply Chains Under Strain, what to do? (26 March)
Tools:
-Keeping food and agricultural systems alive - Analyses and solutions in a period of crises - COVID-19 Pandemic (Continually updated)
- Food and Agriculture Policy Decision Analysis (FAPDA)- a database of the latest food system policy decisions in response to COVID-19(continually updated)
- Food Price Monitoring and Analysis (continually updated)
- Codex Alimentarius Commission best practise guides for trade (continually updated)
Policy Briefs:
FAO has produced a range of policy briefs on the impact of COVID-19 on the food system as well as guidance to mitigate the negative consequences. You can find a full list here. Topics include food supply chains, building resilient local food systems, smallholder producers, urban food systems, fisheries/ aquaculture, food safety and food value chains.
- WFP
- Policy Brief: Why does Food Security and Nutrition Matter in Social Protection responses to Systemic Shocks in the Southern African Region? (Oct 6th)
- Good nutrition for vulnerable urban populations in the context of COVID-19: WFP Interim Guidance : WFP Interim Guidance for analysis and actions across the health, food and social protection systems in urban areas and programme adaptations in the context of COVID-19.(July 2020)
- Economic and food security implications of the COVID-19 outbreak (24 March)
- CFS/HLPE
- CFS Chair's Statement on COVID-19 pandemic + HLPE Interim Issues Paper on the Impact of COVID-19 on Food Security and Nutrition (24 March) - CGIAR
- CGIAR’s Response to COVID-19 (Continually updated) - Global Food Security Cluster
- Coronavirus, impact on well-being, health, food access and food security (25 March)
- WHO
- WHO recommendations to reduce risk of transmission of emerging pathogens from animals to humans in live animal markets (March)
- WHO Guidance for schools, workplaces & institutions (8 April)
- Trade
Both the World Trade Organisation and the World Bank have made repositories of resources relating to trade in the time of COVID-19.
PREGNANCY, BREASTFEEDING, INFANT/YOUNG CHILD FEEDING
- WHO & UNICEF
Prevention, Early Detection and Treatment of Wasting in Children 0-59 Months Through National Health Systems in the Context of COVID-19 (30th July)
- WHO
- Breastfeeding and COVID-19: Scientific Brief (23 June)
- Breastfeeding and COVID-19 For health care workers- outlining the latest information and recommendations, including a decision tree for breastfeeding guidance (28 April)
- Information Flyer: Breastfeeding advice during the COVID-19 outbreak. (WHO-EMRO Office, March)
- Information Flyer: Breastfeeding with COVID-19, Strategies for mothers who are too unwell to breastfeed (WHO, April)
- Q&A on COVID-19, pregnancy, childbirth and breastfeeding (18 March)
- UNICEF, GNC & GTAM
- Breastfeeding safely during the COVID-19 pandemic (28th May)
- Infant and Young Child Feeding (IYCF) in the context of COVID-19 (30 March, continually updated)
- Management of Child Wasting in the Context of COVID-19 (27 March, continually updated)
- The Global Alliance for Vitamin A (GAVA)
- Vitamin A Supplementation: Protecting Children's Lives in the Context of COVID-19
- UNHCR, UNICEF, WFP & WHO
- Infant and Young Child Feeding (IYCF) in the context of the COVID-19 Pandemic: Eastern, Central and Southern Africa (26 March)
- USAID
Infant and Young Child Feeding Recommendations When COVID-19 is Suspected or Confirmed- a resource kit for counsellers that supports UNICEF and WHO recommendations (24 April)
SCHOOL AGED CHILDREN
- UNESCO, WFP, UNICEF & WHO
The importance of investing in the wellbeing of children to avert the learning crisis (October) - UNICEF & WFP
Details on WFP and UNICEF joint response to COVID-19 can be found here. Including publications on school food and nutrition. Supporting children's nutrition during the COVID-19 pandemic
- Multisectoral checklist for school re-opening and school-based nutrition in the context of COVID-19 (28 July). This document from WFP and UNICEF East and Southern Africa regions provides a non-exhaustive list of recommended multi-sectoral actions for Government, UNICEF, WFP and other partners to consider as part of their short and longer-term planning for and implementation of school reopening.
- COVID-19: Missing More Than a Classroom. The impact of school closures on children’s nutrition (January 2021)
- WFP/FAO/UNICEF
- Interim guidance note on "Mitigating the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on food and nutrition of schoolchildren"
- UNICEF, WHO & IFRC
- Key Messages and Actions for COVID-19 Prevention and Control in Schools - WFP
- Global Monitoring of School Meals during COVID-19 School Closures
(a continually updated map showing the number of children no longer receiving school meals) - UNESCO
- COVID-19 education, nutrition, health and well-being resource list. Compiled by UNESCO in assocation with the FRESH network (continually updated)
- The Global Child Nutrition Foundation
- The GCNF website provides up to date insights into the country level impacts and mitigation efforts to protect school aged children from malnutrition related to the COVID-19 outbreak.
ADULTS
- Nutrition Advice
- WHO (all resources contain advice on healthy eating)
- Food and nutrition tips during self-quarantine (by WHO-Europe, March)
- Nutrition Advice for Adults During the COVID-19 (By WHO-EMRO, March)
- How can I grocery shop safely in the time of COVID-19?
- How should I wash fruit and vegetables in the time of COVID-19?
- FAO
- Maintaining a healthy diet during the COVID-19 Pandemic (27 March)
- 9 tips to fight food waste (March)
- UNICEF
- Easy, Affordable and Healthy Eating Tips for Families during the COVID-19 Outbreak (31 March)
- Noncommunicable Disease
- WHO
- Website on NCDs and COVID-19 (including advice for managing NCDs, health professional guidance and rapid assessment of NCD services results)
- WHO Newsflash on NCDs weekly newsletter, register here
- Addressing noncommunicable diseases in the COVID-19 respones: Interim guidance ( 6 April)
- Information note on COVID-19 and NCDs (23 March)
- NCDs and COVID-19: What you need to know (Euro)
- Mental health and psychosocial considerations during the COVID-19 outbreak (18 March)
- Coping with stress during the 2019 COVID-19 Outbreak (English, French, Chinese, Arabic, Russian, Spanish)
- Alcohol and COVID-19: what you need to know -
The UNIATF, WHO and UNDP
- Responding to noncommunicable diseases during and beyond the COVID-19 pandemic: describes why strong action on NCDs must be an integral part of the COVID-19 response, recovery and building back better and steps that should be taken immediately and in the longer term. Includes: evidence review, examples of actions being taken, state of the evidence infographic.
- WFP
- Overweight and Obesity in the context of COVID-19: A WFP technical note and guidance (Aug 27th)
EMERGENCY NUTRITION RESPONSE
- WHO
-Maintaining essential health services: operational guidance for the COVID-19 context- including guidance on the provision of NCD and Nutrition servies (1st June)
Interim Guidance: Community-based health care, including outreach and campaigns, in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic - including guidance on provision of essential nutrition services (May 2020)
- GNC
The Global Nutrition Cluster has a live website with daily nutrition and COVID-19 related updates to collate global, regional, and country level emergency updates (continually updated)
- Nutrition Coordination guidance in the context of COVID-19 (6 April)
- Joint Statement by UNICEF and GNC on the Risk of COVID-19 Complications in Children affected by Wasting (April 7th)
- UNICEF, WFP, GNC & GTAM
- Protecting Maternal Diets and Nutrition Services and Practices in the Context of COVID-19 (22 April)
- Nutrition Information Management, Surveillance and Monitoring in the Context of COVID-19 (14 April) - GTAM
- COVID-19 and Nutrition Technical Brief (27 March) - WFP
- WFP's additional recommendations for the management of maternal and child malnutition prevention and treatment in the context of COVID-19 (2 April)
- Recommendations For Adjusting Food Distribution Standard Operating Procedures In The Context Of The Covid-19 Outbreak (13 March)
- Guidance for cash-based transfers in the context of the Covid-19 (13 March)
- UNICEF
- NutritionI COVID-19: a knowledge dissemination tool to share programmatic guidance, position papers, technical notes, and emerging research and evidence being developed by UNICEF and its partners
- UN Women, WHO, IFRC and OCHA
- COVID-19: How to include marginalized and vulnerable people in risk communication and community engagement (19 March)
A guide for risk communication and community engagement with marginalized people who are more vulnerable in emergencies.
- ENN
The en-net provides a place to submit questions surrounding the emergency response to COVID-19. Current threads are grouped under nutrition programming and include infant and young child feeding, breastfeeding, prevention and treatment of MAM.
Articles and blog posts providing insights into nutrition and food systems in the response to COVID-19
- Joint Statement by ILO, FAO, IFAD and WHO. Impact of COVID-19 on people's livelihoods, their health and our food systems (Oct 13th)
- Standing Together for Nutrition Consortium
Impacts of COVID-19 on childhood malnutrition and nutrition-related mortality, the Lancet (July 27th)
Child malnutrition and COVID-19: the time to act is now, the Lancet (July 27th)
- Global Nutrition Report:
- Nutrition and COVID-19: Malnutrition is a threat-multiplier (May 21st)
- IFAD:
- Protecting health and protecting livelihoods: a delicate balance in the era of COVID-19 (27 May)
- Shaping a holistic response to COVID-19:Protecting food systems and rural producers (9 April)
- FAO:
- Without food, there can be no exit from the pandemic (23 April)
- Mitigating impacts of COVID-19 on food trade and markets. Joint Statement by the Directors-General of FAO, WHO and WTO (31 March);
- WFP:
- School Feeding at home (April 30th)
- 5 ways to safely grocery-shop during the coronavirus pandemic (23 April)
- Risk of hunger pandemic as COVID-19 set to almost double acute hunger by end of 2020 (16 April) - GAIN:
- The COVID-19 Crisis and Food Systems: probable impacts and potential mitigation and adaptation responses + Table (23 March) - IFPRI:
- Biblical, on sterois, and accross generations: The coming food and nutrition crash can be averted if we act now to counter the COVID-19 crisis (28 April)
- Will COVID-19 cause another food crisis? An early review (10 April)
- How COVID-19 may disrupt food supply chains in developing countries (2 April) - CFS, HLPE, UNSG Special Envoy 2021 Food Systems Summit: Ensuring Food Security in the Era of COVID-19 (1 April)
- Asia United Nations Network on Nutrition (FAO, WFP, WHO and UNICEF) Joint statement on nutrition in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic in Asia and the Pacific (17 April)
- UN Secretary-General's statement on the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on Children (16 April)
- CGIAR A4NH: Reshaping Food Systems after COVID-19 (20 April)
Relevant Networks, Knowledge Hubs and CoPs
- WFP's external COVID-19 and Nutrition Toolkit: hosted on WFP's external learning platform Nutx and including the latest nutrition related updates from WFP in response to COVID-19. Register, or login to your account to access resources here.
- Scaling up Nutrition (SUN)- COVID-19 and Nutrition: a knowledge hub for members of the SUN Movement that shares articles and updates which shed light on important links between COVID-19 and nutrition, hunger, health and food systems. SUN COVID-19 and Nutrition Information Note and Key Messages.
- SDG2 Advocacy Hub- SDG2 & COVID-19 Reading List: The SDG2 Advocacy Hub brings together NGOs, advocacy groups, civil society, the private sector and UN agencies to share expertise, ideas, and to collaborate on campaigns to achieve SDG2. The Secretariat has pulled together a number of thought pieces highlighting the impact of COVID-19 on food, food systems and more.
- Nutrition Connect: this initiative mobilises knowledge, share experiences, and stimulate dialogue on public private engagements (PPE) for nutrition. A special section on COVID-19 has been created to bring together news and resources related to the risks, responses and impact of COVID-19 on food systems and nutrition.
- Agriculture-Nutrition COP (Ag2Nut): Join the community to connect with a global network of professionals whose work focuses on the intersection of agriculture and nutrition. Webinars discussions about COVID-19, food systems, and interaction with malnutrition are planned for early April.
- Food for the Cities : Join the community to get in touch with a large group of practitioners, researchers, professors, urban and rural community leaders, technicians and professionals in diverse agency settings sharing ways in which communities, cities and national governments are organizing to address enormous economic and social transformations (in the food system) as a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Agriculture, Nutrition and Health (ANH) Academy: this is a global research network in agriculture and food systems for improved nutrition and health to serve as a platform for learning and sharing. They offer an open-access map of experiences, perspectives, opportunities and questions from researchers around the world about the impact of COVID-19 and other health emergencies on food systems, agriculture and nutrition.
- The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) is curating a special series of blogposts analyzing the impacts of COVID-19 on national and global food and nutrition security, poverty and development.
- SFS Programme statement on the COVID-19 (coronavirus) crisis and food systems. Read about key considerations for our food systems during this unprecedented crisis
- International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD): a commentary that takes stock of emergency measures taken to curb the spread of COVID-19 and provides governments with options for avoiding a surge of investor-state claims challenging those measures.
- The International Panel of Experts on Sustainable Food Systems (IPES-Food) has taken stock of the past 100 days amid the global pandemic, with a new communiqué on COVID-19 and the crisis in food systems. What are the symptoms and causes of this food crisis? Why are we in the midst of this perfect storm? What can be done immediately to avert more damage to society and the economy? And what are the structural changes we now need to protect people and planet? The report is available in EN, FR and SP.
- CARE's COVID 19, Food and Nutrition Security, and Gender Equality examines how COVID19 will especially challenge women and their food and nutrition security. It also shows women can be a part of the solution if they have a seat at the table and a greater voice in decisions.
- The Global Panel on Agriculture and Food Systems for Nutrition's Policy Brief: COVID-19: safeguarding food systems and promoting healthy diets presents 10 priority actions to help policymakers mitigate the effects of the pandemic on food systems, with a focus on consumers and food supply.
9-13 November, 2020
Virtual - Register here
The COVID-19 global pandemic has meant a physical conference in Bangkok is no longer possible so the 5th Global Conference will now be virtual and CONNECTED.
CONNECTED means both the digital nature of the event and the chance to collaborate and connect on the conference digital platform. We plan to make this one of the best virtual events with the same strong programming, engaged attendees and interactive opportunities.
- A combination of live and on-demand sessions
- Live, virtual opening ceremony on November 9, 2020
- Conference programming delivered over a longer period of time
- Opportunities for virtual interaction among delegates, sponsors and speakers
- Live Q&As with speakers
- Facilitated discussions
- Strong regional Asian programming that honours the work that our Local Organizing Committee prepared when the conference was planned for Bangkok
The Micronutrient Forum 5th Conference provides the opportunity for sharing new micronutrient research with a diverse audience across four focused tracks.
Track One: Micronutrient Biology and Status Assessment
Track Two: Efficacy and Safety of Micronutrient Interventions
Track Three: Program Effectiveness
Track Four: Designing Enabling Environments for Micronutrients
Latest Pics
- 15th Africa Day for Food and Nutrition Security CommemorationNovember 4, 2024 - 11:08 am
- Junior Parliament Engagement Meeting – Murewa DistrictNovember 4, 2024 - 11:05 am
- Nutrition Education SessionsOctober 11, 2024 - 9:13 am
- ZAS 2024October 11, 2024 - 9:08 am
- ZITF 2024October 11, 2024 - 9:04 am
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Contact Us!
Tel: +263 242 860 327
WhatsApp: +263 776 990 479
1574 Alpes Road
Harare
Zimbabwe
Email: info@fnc.org.zw
- Monday-Friday: 8am to 4:30pm
- Saturday: Closed
- Sunday: Closed