DEVELOPMENT REPORT - Child Nutrition Program(在线收听

DEVELOPMENT REPORT – May 27, 2002: Child Nutrition Program

By Jill Moss


This is the VOA Special English Development Report.
A new program has been launched to provide children in developing countries with more healthy foods.
Officials made the announcement this month during a three-day special conference on children at the United


Nations.


The new program is called “Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition,” or GAIN.
It aims to save at least two-thousand-million children around the world from health
problems linked to the lack of healthy foods.


Eating foods that lack nutrients can lead to serious health problems. For example,
when pregnant mothers do not get enough nutrients, their babies may be born with
development problems. The baby’s brain might not grow to full size. A lack of
important vitamins and minerals in food causes many serious health problems including blindness.


Many important people in both government and business are working on the GAIN program. They include the
richest man in America, Bill Gates. He started Microsoft, the company that makes computer programs and
operating systems. Two years ago, Mister Gates and his wife Melinda decided to use some of their money to
create a private foundation in Seattle, Washington. The foundation is the biggest not-for-profit organization in the
world, with twenty-four-thousand-million dollars.


The Gates Foundation will give fifty-million dollars over five years to the GAIN program. The money will be
used to add vitamins and minerals to common foods, such as oil, flour and rice.


Several large American food companies are also involved in the program. They are Kraft Foods, Procter and
Gamble, and H-J-Heinz. These companies manufacture food products that are sold around the world. Through
GAIN, the companies will add extra vitamins and minerals to foods sold in poor nations. The companies will also
provide governments and small food producers with technology to improve the nutritional value of foods eaten in
local communities. Some of the added nutrients include iron, vitamin A, iodine and folic acid.


The World Health Organization, several other U-N agencies and the World Bank are involved in the GAIN
project. So are the governments of Japan, Germany and the United States. Organizers say the program is an
investment in the future and could save millions of lives.


This VOA Special English Development Report was written by Jill Moss.

 

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