Vietnam has a nutrition problem: too many of its children are under weight. Yet more and more Vietnamese boys and girls are becoming overweight.
The two conditions may appear to be separate, but they are linked. They are both the result of poor diets.
Vietnam has a history of food insecurity. So many Vietnamese eat more than they should because they are fearful of food shortages. And they remember when there were food shortages in the past.
People in other countries do the same thing. Like Vietnam, these nations have experienced food insecurity. But many of them now have a rising availability of meat, milk, other food products, including “fast food.”
Today, fewer Vietnamese are going hungry. Some experts have praised Vietnam as an example of the success of the United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals. The first of the eight goals was to end extreme poverty and hunger.
The UN’s website says the food poverty rate in Vietnam was reduced by more than two-thirds from 1993 to 2008.
Vietnam has a nutrition problem: too many of its children are under weight. Yet more and more Vietnamese boys and girls are becoming overweight.
The two conditions may appear to be separate, but they are linked. They are both the result of poor diets.
Vietnam has a history of food insecurity. So many Vietnamese eat more than they should because they are fearful of food shortages. And they remember when there were food shortages in the past.
People in other countries do the same thing. Like Vietnam, these nations have experienced food insecurity. But many of them now have a rising availability of meat, milk, other food products, including “fast food.”
Today, fewer Vietnamese are going hungry. Some experts have praised Vietnam as an example of the success of the United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals. The first of the eight goals was to end extreme poverty and hunger.
The UN’s website says the food poverty rate in Vietnam was reduced by more than two-thirds from 1993 to 2008.
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