Bomet County Launches Comprehensive Policy to Combat Malnutrition and Enhance Food Security

Date:

Bomet County has taken a significant step toward improving the health and wellbeing of its residents by unveiling a Multi-Sectoral Food and Nutrition Security Policy. This ambitious initiative aims to address the root causes of malnutrition while enhancing food security for the county’s population.

Tackling Malnutrition: A Call to Action

During the policy launch, Governor Hillary Barchok emphasized the critical role of nutrition in human health and development, linking it to child survival, physical and mental growth, learning capacity, productivity, and socio-economic progress.

“Bomet County faces a triple burden of malnutrition: stunting, underweight, and a rising prevalence of overweight and obesity. These issues are hindering our development goals,” noted Prof. Barchok.

The statistics from the 2022 Kenya Demographic and Health Survey reveal the extent of the challenge:

  • Stunting: 22% of children under five (above the national average of 18%)
  • Wasting: 3%
  • Underweight: 10%
  • Overweight: 5%, up from 3% in 2014

Food insecurity, poor dietary intake, and diseases are among the primary contributors to these alarming figures.

A Collaborative Multi-Sectoral Approach

The policy, developed with the support of Nutrition International, is spearheaded by the Directorate of Nutrition under the Department of Health Services. It takes a holistic, multi-sectoral approach to address the underlying causes of malnutrition.

Governor Barchok credited the invaluable contributions of stakeholders, including members of the County Assembly and other experts, who played essential roles in developing the policy. “With this comprehensive framework, we aim to enhance food security and reduce malnutrition rates while generating long-lasting impacts at the community level,” he explained.

Goals for a Healthier Bomet

Bomet County’s policy is part of a broader vision to eliminate malnutrition and establish a healthier, food-secure population by 2033. Key objectives include:

  • Ensuring collaborative efforts from multiple sectors.
  • Reducing malnutrition rates through targeted interventions.
  • Empowering communities with resources and education on nutrition and food security.

The Road Ahead

The launch of the Multi-Sectoral Food and Nutrition Security Policy represents a pivotal moment for Bomet County. By addressing malnutrition’s root causes and promoting sustainable food security, the county is setting a precedent for other regions to follow in improving community health and development.

Subscribe

spot_img

Popular

Related
Related

The Growing Demand for Blockchain Badges in a Trust-Driven World

Blockchain badges gain rising demand as organizations seek secure, verifiable credentials to build trust, transparency, and authenticity in digital ecosystems.

South Africa: Why It Dismantled Six Nuclear Bombs and Chose a Nuclear-Weapon-Free Future

South Africa dismantled six nuclear bombs to embrace peace, democracy, and global trust through a weapon-free future 🌍🕊️

Argentina Railways at a Crossroads: Freight Privatization to Transform Transport in 2026

Argentina moves toward freight rail privatization in 2026, aiming to modernize transport and reshape national logistics efficiency 🌍⚠️📦

Saudi Crown Prince meets President of the European Council

🤝 Saudi Crown Prince and EU Council President discuss stronger economic ties, regional stability, and future strategic cooperation 🌍⚠️💼