Nutritional anthropology is the interplay between human biology, economic systems, nutritional status and food security,
and how changes in the former affect the latter. If economic and
environmental changes in a community affect access to food, food
security, and dietary health, then this interplay between culture and
biology is in turn connected to broader historical and economic trends
associated with globalization. Nutritional status affects overall health
status, work performance potential, and the overall potential for
economic development (either in terms of human development or
traditional western models) for any given group of people.
General economics and nutrition
General economic summary
Most
scholars construe economy as involving the production, distribution,
and consumption of goods and services within and between societies.[citation needed]
A key concept in a broad study of economies (versus a particular
econometric study of commodities and stock markets) is social relations.
For instance, many economic anthropologists state that the reciprocal
gift exchange, competitive gift exchange, and impersonal market
exchange are all reflective of dominant paradigms of social relations
within a given society.
The main forms of economy extant around most of the world today, in
terms of a simple production, distribution, consumption model, are
subsistence based and market economies. Subsistence refers to production
and consumption on a small-scale of the household or community, while a
market-based economy implies a much broader scale of production,
distribution, and consumption. A market economy
also entails the exchange of goods for currency, versus bartering
commodities or being under continuing reciprocal gift exchange
obligations. This is not to say that market economies do not coexist
with subsistence economies and other forms, but that one type usually
dominates within a given society. However, a broad array of scholarship
exists, stating that market economies are rapidly increasing in
importance on a global scale, even in societies that have traditionally
relied much more heavily on subsistence production. This economic shift has nutritional implications that this entry will explore further.
Modes of production and nutrition
The
most important step in understanding the links between economics and
nutrition is to understand major modes of production that societies have
used to produce the goods (and services) they have needed throughout
human history; these modes are foraging, shifting cultivation,
pastoralism, agriculture, and industrialism (Park 2006).
Foraging, also known as hunting and gathering,
is a subsistence strategy in which a group of people gathers wild
plants and hunts wild animals in order to obtain food. This strategy was
the sole mode of existence for human beings for the vast majority of
human history (inclusive of the archeological and fossil record) and
continued to be practiced by a few groups at least into the middle part
of the 20th century. This mode of production is generally associated
with small, nomadic groups of no more than fifty, also known as bands.
The vast majority of foraging societies do not acknowledge exclusive
ownership of land or other major resources, though they do acknowledge
primary use rights for groups and people may individually possess small
objects or tools such as a bow or cutting tools. Because foraging
usually involves frequent movement and taking food naturally available
rather than altering landscapes for production, many scholars state the
foraging has a minimal negative environmental impact compared to other
modes of production. Though foragers are generally limited in absolute
amount of food available in a given area, foraging groups such as the !Kung in the Kalahari Desert
have often been cited as having a more diverse diet and spending less
time per week procuring food than societies that practice other modes of
production such as intensive agriculture.
Shifting cultivation
is a mode of production involving the low intensity production of
plant-based foods; this mode is also known as horticulture or ‘slash and
burn agriculture’ in some texts. Horticultural societies are generally
situated in semi-sedentary villages of a few hundred that clear a field
and burn the cleared vegetation in order to use the ashes to nourish the
soil (hence the phrase slash and burn). Next, the group plants a crop
or crops in this clearing and uses it for cultivation for several years.
At the end of this period, the entire village relocates and starts the
process anew, leaving the old clearing fallow for a period of decades in
order to allow regeneration through the regrowth of wild vegetation.
These food items can be supplemented through the raising of livestock,
hunting wild game, and in many cases with the gathering of wild plants
(Miller 2005; Park 2006). Though periodic movement precludes absolute
permanent ownership of land, some horticultural societies fiercely
defend current territories and practice violence against neighboring
groups. For instance, Napoleon Chagnon (1997) depicts the Yanamamo of Venezuela and Brazil
as the “Fierce People”, though others have been highly critical of
Chagnon's account of this society. Horticulture can also produce a broad
diet, and in some cases more food per unit of land area than foraging.
Though populations of horticulturalists tend to have greater density
than those of foragers, they are generally less dense than those which
practice other modes of production. If practiced on a small scale, over a
large area, with long fallow periods, horticulture has less negative
environmental impact than agriculture or industrialism, but more than
foraging (Miller 2005). Generally, horticulture coincides with a
subsistence type of economy in terms of production, distribution.
Pastoralism,
defined as reliance on products from livestock coupled with a seasonal
nomadic herding tradition, is similar to horticulture in that it is
extensive in its use of land area. Social groups in pastoral societies
tend to have similar numbers and population density to horticultural
societies. Pastoral societies often trade animal products with
agricultural societies for plant based foods to augment their diet.
Frequent movement often means that pastoralism has a similar
environmental impact to horticulture, though instances of overgrazing,
and consequent land degradation (see later subsection under
Globalization and Nutrition), have been sited in some cases. Pastoralism
generally entails a greater reliance on meat or other animal products,
such as milk or blood, than other modes of production. This mode of
production has a similar use rights profile to shifting cultivation.
Traditionally, pastoralism has coincided with a subsistence based
economy, but in the last several decades, some pastoralist societies,
such as Mongolia, have herded animals and practiced nomadic living patterns but have produced livestock primarily for market exchange.
Agriculture,
sometimes referred to as intensive agriculture, involves clearing and
using the same plot of land for an extended period, sometimes several
generations; it also involves the use of plows and draft animals
in the preparation of land for planting and the cultivation of crops.
Agriculture often supports much higher population densities than other
modes of production (except industrialism) and agricultural societies
can range in population from a few thousand into the millions. Though
agriculture produces more food per unit of land area than the previously
mentioned modes, the tendency of agricultural societies to focus on
relatively few crops has often meant that these societies have much less
diverse diets than foraging and horticultural societies. There is some
archaeological and fossil evidence that populations in transition from
foraging to agriculture have tended to suffer reduced stature, reduced
musculature, and to exhibit other markers of malnutrition. Research has
suggested that agriculture paradoxically allows a higher, but less
healthy population for a given area. The advent of agriculture has
marked that advent of social stratification in many parts of the world,
with marked differentials in access to resources between segments of the
same society. This mode of production also is more likely to entail
permanent individual or family ownership of particular tracts of land
than previously mentioned modes of production. Agriculture has
co-occurred with both subsistence and market economies, often with a
single society exhibiting some degree of both types of economies and has
a more negative impact on the environment than the aforementioned modes
of production.
Industrialism combines agriculture with mechanized industrial production of goods through the use of fossil fuels.
Additionally, industrial societies use mechanized equipment in order to
prepare land for planting, harvest crops, and distribute food to
locations distant from where the original crops were planted.
Industrialism shows similar trends to agriculture in terms of population
density, and environmental impact, except to a much greater degree.
Dietary diversity can be highly variable under an industrial mode of
production and can depend on access to foods produced for local
subsistence on the one hand, or to income level and purchasing power
visa vie foods available in food markets (Leatherman and Goodman 2005).
Dietary diversity and nutritional health often correlate with the degree
of social stratification within an industrial society and sometimes
between societies. With the exception of Soviet
model states, industrial societies are heavily based on the concept of
private property rights and the accumulation of profit through “free
enterprise”.
The general trend for many societies over the past several
millennia has been toward agriculture, and in the past two centuries,
toward industrialism. Though these two modes of production are by no
means superior to other modes in every respect, the fact that societies
that practice them tend to have larger populations, higher population
densities, and a more complex social structure has correlated with the
geographic expansion of agricultural and industrial societies at the
expense of societies emphasizing other modes of production. Concurrent
with this trend toward intensified agricultural and industrial
production has been the rise of the social and economic paradigm of
capitalism, which entails the production and sale of goods and services
in the market place in order to produce a profit. These trends have had
profound implications for nutritional status for human beings on a
global scale. In order to discern how broader economic and environmental
trends affect a community's food systems, food security, and
nutritional status, it is important to summarize one of the most
significant economic and ecological phenomena today, globalization.
The next section will treat the linkages between economic and
ideological trends over the last several centuries and environmental and
political economic factors affecting access to food and nutritional
status.
Globalization and nutrition
General summary of globalization
Though
the scope and dimensions of globalization as most people currently
construe it are of fairly recent origin, the broader phenomenon of
global interconnections through cultural diffusion and trade is several
centuries old. Starting in the late Fifteenth century, European powers
expanded beyond the European sub-continent to found colonies in the
Americas, East Asia, South Asia, Australia and Oceania. This expansion
has had a profound impact in terms of wealth creation in Europe and
extraction elsewhere, cultural changes in most of the world's societies,
and biological phenomena such as the introduction of several infectious
diseases into the Western Hemisphere,
which caused tremendous disruption and population reduction for
indigenous societies there. These events, far from occurring
coincidentally, have had synergistic relationships, in one vivid
example, the decimation of Amerindian
populations through infectious disease often preceding and facilitating
subsequent conquest by European powers. Such conquests in turn have
often had significantly negative impacts on internal cohesion, ability
of populations to attain adequate resources for their own subsistence
and traditional social obligations, and local environments for colonized
societies. In order to understand the effects of globalization on
nutritional status and food security, it is important to understand the
historical circumstances that have led to contemporary globalization,
and that still manifest themselves in political, social, material, and
physical/health differentials between (and within) the different peoples
of the world today.
“The Rise of the Merchant, Industrialist, and Capital
Controller,” written by Richard Robbins in 2005, uses a hypothetical
scenario of the reader as a “merchant adventurer” to detail economic
world history starting in 1400. In 1400, China was arguably the most
cosmopolitan and technologically complex society in the world. It was a
center of trade, along with the Middle East, East Africa, and ports on
the Mediterranean Sea.
Western Europe, while playing a part in this network, did not dominate
it by any means; one could argue for European marginalization in fact.
This circumstance began to change when the Europeans “discovered” the
Americas, setting in motion a process that would disrupt many societies
and devastate indigenous populations of the Western Hemisphere. The
dominant economic paradigm of this period was mercantilism,
whereby European merchants began to achieve power in world markets and
in relation to European governing aristocracies. Robbins cites example
of government protections that facilitated mercantilism in the form of
exclusive proprietary rights to trading companies and armies used to
protect trade by force if necessary. He details instances of government
protection such as the example of how Great Britain destroyed India's
textile industry and turned that society into an importer of textiles is
especially illustrative. In dealing with imperialism,
capitalism, and the rise of corporations, Robins further details the
manner in which the “West” transformed various regions/peoples from
proactive participants on global trade networks into sources of raw
materials and consumers of European or North American exports. This history of world trade is important to the consideration of current issues of disparity of power and wealth.
There are many critiques the policies of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) in the promotion of high intensity capital investment in
developing nations (e.g. Weller et al. 2001; Fort et al. 2004).
Disparities within nations and growing poverty rates in many nations
also provide compelling evidence of the idea that the rewards of economic globalization
are uneven at best. There is a great deal of literature about
globalization and increases in health disparities both between and
within countries.
Finally, there is Amartya Sen with Development as Freedom
(1999); here Sen disagrees about whether or not the world's poor are
getting poorer, but also maintains that this criterion is not the most
important. He argues that relative disparities and power differentials
are the most important problems of globalization. Sen states that the
increasing interconnection of the Worlds societies can have positive
benefits, but that the disparities and opportunities for exploitation
must be mitigated to the greatest extent possible, if they can not be
eliminated outright. Sen provides groundwork for a nuanced middle ground
between unabashed proponents and opponents of globalization.
Far from being universally decried, the recent accelerated
expansion of western capitalism, geographically, politically, and
ideologically, has been lauded in many quarters. International and
bilateral agencies such as the World Bank, IMF, and the United States Agency for International Development
(USAID) have utilized free market capitalist theories extensively in
development programs in many corners of the globe whose state aims are
to promote economic growth for communities and nation-states and to
alleviate poverty. Likewise prominent individuals such as former U.S. Federal Reserve Board Chair Alan Greenspan and U.S. based journalist Thomas Friedman
have held forth extensively about the possibilities of economic and
social improvement in developed and developing nations alike, mainly
through increased access to appropriate education, sophisticated
communications and transportation technology, and a paradigm of social
and economic “flexibility”, where individuals and communities who can
best adapt to rapid changes in the role of governments and the
particular economic base of a given location would be in the best
position to take advantage of the opportunities offered by economic,
political, and cultural globalization. This free market ideology is also
predominant in the policies and procedures of the World Trade Organization
(WTO) and many transnational corporations (TNC's), most of which are
headquartered in developed nations. The rise of Capitalism and the free
market society have indeed increased and exacerbated food insecurity in
the world's poor due to the structure and function of a Capitalist
society where only those who can afford to buy food to feed themselves
are the only ones with access to a secure and adequate food supply. Food
is no longer a human right to life and health due to the Capitalist
approach to commodifying food in the free market society that as a
result of globalization has spread all over the world. Transnational
corporations and trade organizations such as NAFTA facilitate this
approach of commodifying our world's food supply by enforcing laws and
regulations which further deepen the inequality of wealth and unequal
distribution of common goods such as food between the rich and the poor.
In contrast to the “western” economic model, most early social
scholarship about economics stressed the predominance of reciprocity as a
primary driving force in traditional non-Western societies. Marcel Mauss
referred to the gift as a “total social phenomenon”, fraught with
ritual and socio political as well as material significance. Though some
objects, such as armbands or shell necklaces in the kula ring that runs
through several island groups off the coast of Papua New Guinea,
might induce some form of prestige based competition, the terms of
exchange are significantly different than a monetary transaction under a
modern capitalist system. While Appadurai
actually describes ritual objects as a type of commodity, he couches
them as such under significantly different terms than the market-based
types of commodity normally treated by economists. Annette Wiener
criticizes earlier works in anthropology and sociology that depicted
“simple” societies utilizing a simple version of reciprocity. Whatever
the theoretical stance of social scholars on non-western traditional
economies, there is a consensus that such essentials as food and water
tended to be shared more freely than other types of goods or services.
This dynamic tends to change with the introduction of a market-based
economy into a society, with food coming to be increasingly treated as a
commodity, rather than a social good or an essential component of
health and survival.
Regardless of one's overall perspective on the costs and benefits
of economic globalization, there are several examples in social
scholarship of groups of people suffering a decline in nutritional
statues subsequent to the introduction of a capitalist market-based
economy into an area that has previously practiced an economy based more
on subsistence production and reciprocity. Although some people's food
security may improve with access to more steady income, many people in
communities that have heretofore practiced a subsistence economy
may experienced greater food insecurity and nutritional status due to
insufficient income to replace the foods no longer produced by a
household. Whether the growth of food insecurity and socioeconomic
disparities in many parts of the world in recent decades is an inherent
part of globalization or a temporary “growing pain” until economic
development attains its full efficacy is a matter of debate, but there
are many empirical examples of communities being dissociated from
traditional means of food production and not being able to find
sufficient wages in a new market economy to achieve a balanced and
calorically sufficient diet. Several factors affecting food security and
nutritional status range on a continuum from more physical phenomena
such as land degradation and land expropriation, to more culturally and
socio-politically driven things such as cash cropping, dietary
delocalization, and commoditization of food; one important caveat is
that all of these trends are interconnected and fall under a broad
category of socio-cultural and economic disruptions and dislocations
under the current paradigm of globalization.
Land degradation
Though Blakie and Brookfield acknowledge the problematic aspects of defining land degradation,
with definitional variation depending in large part on the scholar or
stakeholder in question, they do outline a general idea of reduced soil
fertility and reduced ability of a given area of land to provide for
people's subsistence needs, as compared to earlier periods in human
history on that same land area. Paul Farmer discusses the effects of land degradation in central Haiti
on local people's ability to produce sufficient food for their families
within the environs of their own communities. Farmer links malnutrition
in a Haitian village with vulnerability to infectious diseases,
including tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS,
both in terms of chance of infection and severity of symptoms for those
infected. While the extremely low percentage of the U.S. population
involved in agriculture strongly suggests that direct access to arable
land is not an absolute necessity for food security and nutritional
health, land degradation in many developing nations is accelerating the
rate of rural to urban migration at a more accelerated rate than most
major cities are equipped to handle. Leatherman and Goodman also allude
to land degradation co-occurring with decreases in food security and
nutritional status in some communities in the Mexican state of Quintana Roo.
Walter Edgar discusses the correlation between land degradation and
economic disruption, as well as nutritional hardship, in the U.S. state
of South Carolina in the decades following the Reconstruction Period.
Coupled with land expropriation, land degradation has the effect of
thrusting unprepared subsistence producers or other peasant farmers into
a fast-paced and complex market economy heavily influence by policy
makers who are far removed from the concerns and worldview of small
scale farmers in developing countries.
Land expropriation
Occurring
for a variety of reasons, land expropriation, or the disruption of
traditional ownership of land by more powerful interests such as local
elites, governments, or transnational corporations, can also markedly
affect nutritional status. Robbins details examples in Mexico of
peasants facing land expropriation in the face of agribusiness
consolidation under the North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA); in many cases, these subsistence producers are forced either
to migrate to cities or work sporadically as agricultural labors. Since
most if not all food must be purchased under these circumstances, the
food security and nutritional status of these newer additions to the
pool of poor unskilled labor often declines. Another common impetus for
expropriation is non-agricultural “economic development”, often in the
form of tourism. In one Example, Donald MacLeod details curtailment of
subsistence activities, mainly fishing and cultivation, in areas of the Canary Islands
in the face of pressures from tourism interests wishing to monopolize
the “pristine” beauty of locations catering to Germans and other
tourists from EU nations. Ironically, local people see relatively little
monetary benefit from the rise in tourism, as many vacations are
planned by German tour companies (linked with all inclusive German owned
resorts in the Canary Islands) and are paid for before tourists ever
arrive at their vacation destination. Leatherman and Goodman and
Daltabuit point to circumscription of land available for traditional
milpa horticultural production in communities in the Mexican state of
Quintana Roo in the face of growing demands for land for resorts by
tourism interests, under the auspices of the Mexican national
government. One expropriation scenario with a long history is cash
cropping, where crops grown for revenue from exports are prioritized
over crops grown for local consumption.
Cash cropping
In Sweetness and Power, written by Sidney Mintz
in 1985, details examples of mono-cropping, or planting massive areas
with one cash crop, in several Caribbean Islands, including Cuba. He
states that Cuba went from being an economically diverse place with many
small scale subsistence producers to a mono-crop plantation system
dependent on cash from its sugar crop and substantial food imports for
the later centuries of the Spanish Colonial Period. He describes Cuba as
an example of growing impoverishment and malnutrition concurrent with
increasing concentration of land and other resources in fewer hands.
Gross and Underwood illustrate the mid Twentieth Century example of the
advent of sisal production in Northeastern Brazil. These authors detail a vicious cycle of the unfulfilled promises of sisal
production for smallholders; because owners of sisal processing
machines did not think small farms worth their time, small holders could
not process and sell their sisal and were often forced to work as
laborers on large farms. Sisal is cited as being particularly insidious
because it is hard to eradicate once introduced and makes subsequent
subsistence production virtually impossible. This article treats a
common situation of households prioritizing working males in food
allocation, exposing growing children to malnutrition, particularly
under nutrition and micronutrient deficiency, and all of its attendant
ills. Edgar discusses how exclusive planting of cotton in the
Southeastern United States during the late Nineteenth and early
Twentieth Centuries caused substantial land degradation, lead to a great
deal of land expropriation from small scale farmers, and occurred in a
context of widespread malnutrition. Especially in Today's complex,
accelerated version of globalization, cash cropping is intimately linked
with the delocalization of diets and the commoditization of food and
has profound, though varied, implications for food security and
nutritional status.
Delocalization and commoditization
In
“Diet and Delocalization: Dietary Challenges since 1750”, Pelto and
Pelto trace the concurrent historical development of global capitalism
and dietary delocalization, a process in which increasing portions of
diet for a household or community come from an increasing distance away
from that same community. Nutritional scholars explicitly state that
delocalization does not necessarily entail increased food insecurity and
malnutrition, but that access to an adequate diet becomes increasingly
removed from local control and increasingly contingent on access to hard
cash or some other non-food precious resource. Leatherman and Goodman
discuss the ironic result of their study in Quintana Roo that both the
groups with the best and worst food security and nutritional status
worked in service industries related to tourism, with the median group
being a milpa community. They differentiate between those with stable
employment and income who have access to a wide variety of foods on a
regular basis and those with sporadic employment who struggle for
caloric sufficiency within the household and have low dietary diversity.
The main import of these examples is not that delocalization is
universally negative, but that it tends to increase disparities of food
security and nutritional status within and between social groups, with
some segments suffering marked degradation of both.
Closely linked with delocalization is food commoditization, or
the treatment of food primarily as a market commodity, rather than
prioritizing other uses, such as sustenance, human rights entitlement,
or social relations. Dewey describes the deleterious effects of food
commoditization for rural communities in Central America, to include
reductions in food security and nutritional status. Much of tourism
literature details marked increases in the commoditization of food
subsequent to the introduction of tourism as a form of market based
economic development. Dewey and Robbins also state that when food is
primarily seen as a commodity by powerful interests, not only does such
an ideology increase delocalization, but also land degradation and
expropriation as elite land owners or transnational corporations cause
massive social and ecological disruptions in the process of
mono-cropping food crops over broad swaths of land in order to reap
maximum profits from overseas sales. Indeed, delocalization and
commoditization have significant potential to diminish food security and
nutritional status in poor communities over broad areas of the world.
Dietary health
In
terms of food security and dietary diversity, which are defined as
reliable access to a caloric sufficiency and access to a wide variety of
macro and micro nutrients in order to maintain nutritive balance,
respectively, the commoditization of food plays a key role in
diminishing the control local populations have over their own
subsistence production. Delocalization of food systems, which Pelto and
Pelto
define as taking production of food out of a local subsistence context
and tying it to geographically broader market systems, can precipitate
marked cultural and nutritional disruption. Likewise commoditization of
food systems, defined as a paradigm shift from one of subsistence or
social significances shift toward one which treats food primarily as a
market commodity,
can affect dietary health as well as collective identity.
Commoditization tends to shift food security and dietary diversity away
from integrated kinship or other reciprocal distribution networks toward
being an issue of who can best compete in a free market to achieve
these ends; indeed, commoditization has often been linked to breakdowns
in food entitlements, which are defined as cultural or social norms that
ensure food access for all members of a given social group.
The deleterious effects of mild to moderate malnutrition
(MMM) not only pertain to caloric insufficiency (often closely
associated with food insecurity) but also to poor dietary diversity; in
particular, curtailed access to protein, complex carbohydrates, zinc,
iron, and other micronutrients. The ways in which undernutrition and micronutrient deficiency interact with other health effects are myriad.
The most obvious manifestation of MMM, stunting is defined as height
and or weight below the standard range for a particular age group.
However, far from being a mere difference in height and weight, stunting
was correlated with a wide variety of health effects.
Closely related to stunting, level of physical activity closely
articulates with nutritional status and affects childhood development.
Chronically malnourished infants and toddlers showed decreased physical
activity compared to supplemented groups or those who are adequately
nourished.
Perhaps, the most critical facets of human development correlated
to nutrition levels are behavior and cognition; development in these
two areas could have profound effects on life chances for individuals
and populations. In comparing a group of southern Mexican children
subject to MMM and a group in the same region who received dietary
supplements, Chavez et al.
show a relation between MMM and poorer school performance;
unsupplemented children showed poorer participation, greater degree of
in-class distraction, more sleeping in class, and poorer performance on
standardized tests. In addition, malnourished children showed poorer
scores on intelligence quotient (I.Q.) tests than their supplemented counterparts.
Of all the aspects of human existence, sexual reproduction
may have the most detailed articulation with malnutrition. In
populations subject to MMM, menarche occurs later (15.5 years) than in
adequately nourished populations; an early average menopause (40.5 years) makes for a relatively short reproductive period for women in the study area for Chavez et al. Because of longer postpartum periods of amenorrhea, birth spacing was an average of 27 months, versus 19 months. Though longer birth spacing can help control population growth, the evidence that Chavez et al.
present suggest a curtailing of reproductive choice and adaptability
due to malnutrition. This study also linked maternal MMM with higher
infant and young child mortality.
Another effect of MMM crucial to life chances is work capacity;
MMM shows a cyclical pattern of decreasing work capacity and its
rewards, further exacerbating the problem. Allen
found a correlation between reduced VO2 max rates among MMM populations
and decreased muscular strength and endurance in the performance of
strenuous manual labor. Although personal motivation can have a strong
positive impact on individual work performance, better muscular
development associated with a history of adequate nutrition increases
overall work capacity, irrespective of effort. Among Jamaican
cane cutters, those within normal size range cut more cane than those
who showed stunting. One cultural variation in this trend was found
among MMM Guatemalan
workers who put forth work effort comparable to better nourished
counterparts, but were likely to engage in resting behavior than in
recreational or social activity during off hours.
In wage economies where workers get paid in proportion to productive
output, reduced work capacity can translate to reduced food security,
increasing the risk of MMM.
Additionally, malnutrition and infectious disease have a synergistic relationship that can lead to spiraling health deterioration. According to Allen,
the incidence of infectious disease does not vary significantly between
MMM and adequately nourished populations, but the duration and severity
of disease episodes is greater for MMM populations.
A key reason for this disparity is that infectious disease often
results in poor food intake and nutrient absorption. Not only do sick
people generally eat little, but what they do eat is often of minimal
benefit due to nausea and diarrhea.
Aside from MMM due to under-nutrition or micro-nutrient
deficiency, over-nutrition, defined as the consumption of too many
calories for one's body size and physical activity level, is also becoming an increasingly significant problem for much of the World. Overnutrition has been associated with obesity, which the USDA and McEwen and Seeman correlate with increased risk of type II diabetes, cardiovascular disease,
and stroke. Overnutrition is also often associated with the
co-occurrence of caloric sufficiency (or over-sufficiency) and
micronutrient deficiency, as is often the case where processed foods
that are high in calories, but low in most nutrients, increase in
dietary prominence. Leatherman and Goodman and Guest and Jones
discuss the growing coincidence of stunting and other symptoms of MMM
and obesity within developing nations, sometimes within the same
community. This trend can be linked to changing economies and food
practices in much of the World under contemporary economic
globalization.
Also the study conducted by Baten and Blum have illustrated
changes in the effects from a particular diet of the population between
1870 and 1989. Important finding of the study was that the effect of the
protein on heights of the individuals became less significant during
the second half of the period under observation (i.e. 1950-1989).
Moreover, the main sources of the protein were also modified. This was
caused by the development of the technologies and global trade, which
have likewise reduced the food shortage.