Saturday, October 13, 2012

Food fortification with vitamin A

Food fortification involves adding nutrients to foods in order to maintain or improve the quality of the diet of a targeted group or population.

WHO has a goal of worldwide elimination of vitamin A deficiency and its tragic consequences, including blindness, disease and premature death.

The combination of breastfeeding and vitamin A food fortification holds the promise of achieving combating vitamin deficiency.

The aims is to add vitamin A to a regularly dietary constituent of the targeted population at a specified level that will correct an existing dietary deficiency without posing significant risks of overdosing those who habitually consume the largest quantity of the fortified product.

Food fortification is a highly effectively strategy to correct underlying low intake of vitamin A and is widely used in developing countries to prevent deficiencies of multiple nutrients.

Vitamin A fortification of staple foods, such as margarine and sugar has made significant stride since eradicating blindness and promoting growth in children in developing countries.

Although fortification can take several years to initiate and longer still to penetrate poor markets and reach sufficient proportions of those at risk, some priority countries have made significant progress.
Food fortification with vitamin A

Most Popular Articles

Articles around the world

  • The distinctive flavor of pumpkins is the result of a fascinating interplay between natural biosynthesis and external influences such as enzymatic activi...
  • Fish oil is widely recognized as a potent source of essential nutrients, particularly omega-3 fatty acids crucial for human health. Within fish oil, two ke...
  • A Class III product recall involves the removal or correction of a product that fails to meet regulatory standards but does not pose a significant risk to ...
  • The Bell Telephone Company, founded by Alexander Graham Bell and Gardiner Greene Hubbard in 1877, marked a pivotal moment in telecommunications history. Be...

Food Technology and Processing

Feed from World of Nutrition

BannerFans.com