Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Photo © Unicef/Clark
2
Nutrition is eating enough of the right foods to help your body grow.
Photo © Unicef/Asselin
3
Nutrients are things like vitamins, which are good for you.
Malnutrition is about not having the right nutrients you need to be healthy and strong. Nutrients are things like vitamins, which are good for you. Photo © Unicef/Schermbrucker
4
If we don’t get enough nutrients, our bodies and brains won’t grow properly. We will get poorly more easily and become very weak. Explain that malnutrition can lead to physical disabilities and learning difficulties. If a child becomes severely malnourished, this can even lead to death. Malnutrition is responsible for nearly half of all deaths of children under five. Photo © Unicef/Maule-ffinch
5
Measuring and checking for signs of malnutrition.
Fifteen-month-old Alice has the circumference of her arm measured with a MUAC measuring band as part of the malnutrition screening process at a hospital in Liberia, West Africa. Photo © Unicef/Maule-ffinch
6
What can be done to help? Giving life-saving food.
A health worker treats eight-month-old Ali in a Unicef-supported heath centre. Ali is suffering from severe acute malnutrition. Photo © Unicef/Al-Issa
7
What can be done to help? Teaching mummies, daddies and carers about the best foods to make for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Parents wait with their children at a hospital in Bhutan. Photo © Unicef/Lopez
8
We can help babies grow up healthy and strong by making sure that they have the right food during the first 1,000 days of their lives This is when our bodies and our brains develop fastest. Photo © Unicef/Matas
9
What is our school’s hope for every child in the world?
Photo © Unicef/Commins
10
In words, pictures, music or drama create a ‘story of hope’ about how children with malnutrition can be helped. Photo © Unicef/Schermbrucker
11
Day for Change is a special day organised by Unicef where schools can raise money to help malnourished children grow up healthy and strong. non-uniform day sports competition bake sale class quiz picnic By taking part in Day for Change we can learn about nutrition and help malnourished children grow up healthy and strong. The challenge is to get our school to collect as much loose change as possible by hosting any kind of fundraising activity, such as a ‘wear it blue’ day, a bake sale or a bring-a-pound day. The spare change we raise will change children’s lives. Ask the class for ideas of how they could raise money at home and at school. Suggestions can include: Asking friends and family to sponsor you for a personal challenge, such as a sponsored silence, giving up sweets and chocolate for a week or going without TV or the Internet for a week. Asking friends and family to sponsor a sporting feat, such as a danceathon, sponsored walk or football penalty shoot-out competition. Organise a school or class event, such as a bake sale, school disco or fun ‘wear it blue’ day. Photos © Unicef/Fields
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.