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[[Image:Plumpy'nut wrapper.jpg|thumb|right|Plumpy'nut wrapper]]
[[Image:Plumpy'nut wrapper.jpg|thumb|right|Plumpy'nut wrapper]]
'''Plumpy'nut''', also known as '''Plumpy''', is a [[peanut]]-based [[food]] for use in [[famine relief]] which was formulated in [[1999]] by [[André Briend]], a [[France|French]] [[scientist]].
'''Plumpy'nut''', also known as '''Plumpy''', is a [[peanut]]-based [[food]] for use in [[famine relief]] which was formulated in [[1999]] by [[André Briend]], a [[France|French]] [[scientist]].

Revision as of 14:00, 7 September 2008

File:Plumpy'nut wrapper.jpg
Plumpy'nut wrapper

Plumpy'nut, also known as Plumpy, is a peanut-based food for use in famine relief which was formulated in 1999 by André Briend, a French scientist.

Overview

Nutrition in Plumpy'nut
Micronutrient Amount
Vitamin A
910 mcg
Vitamin D
16 mcg
Vitamin E
20 mg
Vitamin C
53 mg
Vitamin B1
0.6 mg
Vitamin B2
1.8 mg
Vitamin B6
0.6 mg
Vitamin B12
1.8 mcg
Vitamin K
21 mcg
Biotin
65 mcg
Folic Acid
210 mcg
Pantothenic Acid
3.1 mg
Niacin
5.3 mg
Calcium
320 mg
Phosphorus
394 mg
Potassium
1111 mg
Magnesium
92 mg
Zinc
14 mg
Copper
1.78 mg
Iron
11.53 mg
Iodine
110 mcg
Sodium
<290 mg
Selenium
30 mcg

Plumpy'nut is a high protein and high energy peanut-based paste in a foil wrapper. It tastes slightly sweeter than peanut butter. It is categorized by the WHO as a Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Food (RUTF).

Plumpy’nut requires no preparation or special supervision, making it easy to deploy in difficult conditions. Plumpy'nut is very difficult to over eat and keeps even after opening. It has a 2 year shelf life when unopened. The product was inspired by the popular Nutella spread. It is manufactured by Nutriset, a French company, that specializes in making food supplements for relief work in their factory near Rouen in northern France. The ingredients are: peanut paste, vegetable oil, milk powder, powdered sugar, vitamins and minerals, combined in a foil pouch. Each pack provides 500 Kcal or 2.1 MJ. [1].

Plumpy'Nut contains vitamins A, B-complex, C, D, E and K, and minerals calcium, phosphorus, potassium, magnesium, zinc, copper, iron, iodine, sodium, and selenium.

Application

The New York Times reported that the paste is administered in 500 kilocalories (2.1 MJ) packets, twice daily, for two to four weeks, in combination with Unimix, a vitamin-enriched flour for making porridge, and will reverse malnutrition in severely malnourished children.[2]

The World Health Organization has recognized the utility of this food for famine relief.[3] Plumpy'nut can be packaged in local peanut-producing areas, such as Malawi and Niger, by mixing the ground nut and milk paste with a slurry of vitamins and minerals from Nutriset.

Médecins Sans Frontières (known as Doctors without Borders in the US) has been dispensing fourteen packets (1 week's worth) of Plumpy'nut in 22 centers in Niger since May 2005, but only to those children who are dramatically underweight and sufficiently well to benefit from outpatient care.

Project Peanut Butter has done extensive field trials with RUTF in Malawi from 2001-2007, operates the first local factory where Plumpy'nut is produced, and distributes this therapeutic food to malnourished Malawian children in more than 20 nutritional rehabilitation centers.

How it works

Plumpy’nut is frequently used as a treatment for emergency malnutrition cases. It helps with rapid weight gain, which can make the difference between life and death for a young child. The product is also easy for children to eat since they can feed themselves the soft paste. The fortified peanut butter–like paste contains a balance of lipids, sugar, and protein (macronutrients), vitamins, minerals (micronutrients) and calories. Peanuts contain mono-unsaturated fats, which are easy to digest. They are also very high in calories, which means that a child will get a lot of energy from just small amounts (important because their stomachs have shrunk). They are rich in zinc and protein — both good for the immune system, and protein is needed for muscle development. Peanuts are also a good source of vitamin E, an antioxidant that helps to convert food into energy.

Cost

A standard plumpy'nut treatment goes for four weeks (two to three times a day) at a cost of 12 Euros in Africa. The cost for four weeks of Plumpy'nut and Unimix is $35 per child. The cost in Haiti for a similar RUTF peanut butter based product is a bit higher, but still relatively inexpensive.

Success stories

Plumpy‘nut was first used during the crisis in Darfur in western Sudan and Moyross. There, it was fed to some 30,000 children and aid officials there say it has helped cut malnutrition rates in half.

In Niger, where this product was also used, there has been a huge reduction in illness and death from malnutrition. In 2005, the region that Plumpy’nut was applied had the highest malnutrition rate in Niger. The region now has the lowest malnutrition rate in the country. After widespread use, Plumpy’nut now treats more than 120,000 children (the UN estimates that 150,000 children under 5 are severely malnourished in Niger and a further 650,000 are moderately malnourished).

Plumpy'nut projects worldwide locations

Population/country Project Name Web Addresss
Africa
Malawi, Blantyre Project Peanut Butter www.projectpeanutbutter.org/where.htm
Sierra Leone Project Peanut Butter www.projectpeanutbutter.org/where.htm
Ethiopia, Addis Ababa Plumpy Nut in the Field by Hilina Enriched Foods* www.plumpynutinthefield.com/eng/index-eng.php
Niger Plumpy in the Field

Societe’ de Transformation Alimentaire (STA) *

www.plumpynutinthefield.com/eng/index-eng.php
DRCongo Jongea Lubumbashi* http://www.plumpynutinthefield.com/eng/index-eng.php
Somalia Medicins Sans Frontieres http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org
Uganda International Medical Corp http://www.imcworldwide.org
Caribbean
Dominican Republic In planning http://www.plumpynutinthefield.com/eng/index-eng.php
Haiti Meds and Foods for Kids http://www.medsandfoodforkids.org

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.nutriset.fr/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&lang=en&id=30
  2. ^ Wines, Michael (August 8, 2005). "Hope for Hungry Children, Arriving in a Foil Packet". {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ World Health Organization, UNICEF, UN System Standing Committee on Nutrition (May, 2007). Community-Based Management of Severe Acute Malnutrition. A Joint Statement by the World Health Organization, the World Food Programme, the United Nations System Standing Committee on Nutrition and the United Nations Children's Fund (Report). ISBN 978-92-806-4147-9. {{cite report}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links