A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, June 4, 2014
Over 1.2 mn children attend school without breakfast – medical expert
By Don Asoka Wijewardena-June 4, 2014
Senior lecturer in Paediatrics at the Faculty of Medicine, Colombo
University, Dr. Pujitha Wickremasinghe yesterday revealed that out of
four million schoolchildren in Sri Lanka about 30 per cent attended
schools without having breakfast.
Although school canteen owners had been instructed to implement school
canteen policy and help inculcate healthy eating habits among students,
most of them were found to be selling food with very high levels of
sugar, oil and salt, Dr.Wickremasinghe said at a media conference on
Nutrition of schoolchildren at the Health Education Bureau.
Dr. Wickremasinghe pointed out that the time had come to save the
student population from serious illnesses as most parents encouraged
them to consume junk food for convenience. Anaemia, wasting, stunting
and obesity were prevalent among children, the senior lecturer said.
Consultant Community Physician Dr. Mrs. Ayesha Lokubalasooriya said that
the plight of the student population in Sri Lanka was a matter of great
concern. Lack of nutrition caused impaired physical growth, anaemia,
poor educational performance, poor memory, low IQ, delayed puberty and
eating disorders and obesity, she stressed.
Director Nutrition Coordination Unit Ministry of Health Dr. Mrs. Shanthi
Gunawardena said that a study conducted by the Medical Research
Institute (MRI) had revealed that around 15 percent of children and
infants between six and 11 months were suffering from micro-nutrient
deficiencies. Even children at pre-school ages (20 percent) were
suffering from anaemia, she said. About 22.2 per cent non-pregnant women
between the ages of 15 and 19 and 16.7 per cent of pregnant mothers
were suffering from anaemia, she said.
