Targeted location (aggregate) |
Global - Focused on areas with high prevalence of malnutrition, with a focus on Sub-Saharan Africa and South and Southeast Asia. |
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Verification status | Verified Find out more |
Commitment description
The $922 million commitment over the next five years will advance the foundationâs systems approach, prioritizing efforts across food, health, and social protection systems to reach the most vulnerable. The foundation will continue to invest in proven approaches to improve nutrition for the worldâs most vulnerable, including a focus on the 1,000-day window of opportunity - from conception through age 2. Nutrition is now prioritized through four key foundation portfolios:
Fortifying commonly consumed foods with vitamins and minerals: Food fortification - adding safe levels of essential vitamins and minerals to commonly consumed foods such as salt, flour, and cooking oil - is one of the most scalable, sustainable, and cost-effective ways to reduce malnutrition worldwide, but it has yet to reach its full potential. The foundation will deepen its engagement in large-scale food fortification by investing in solutions to produce actionable data; delivering high-quality technical support to millers and food producers; achieving innovations in the types and level of vitamins and minerals that can be delivered through staple foods; increasing industry self-monitoring and transparency; and promoting the adoption of more and better standards for large-scale food fortification.
Nutritious food systems: This portfolio aims to increase equitable consumption of safe, affordable, nutritious diets year round through evidence-driven food systems and agricultural programs and policies. Priority areas include increasing availability and use of dietary data for program design and evaluation; improving evidence for how agricultural programs can positively impact nutrition; providing technical assistance for the design and implementation of evidence-driven and gender-responsive food systems programs and policies; and improving food safety.
Maternal, infant, and young child nutrition: Poor maternal nutrition is a major driver of maternal mortality and newborn and infant mortality and is a historically underfunded area. This portfolio explores how to provide the right nutritional support to the most vulnerable populations, including pregnant and lactating women, infants, and young children who are malnourished. This involves developing evidence on how to deliver high-impact interventions and new innovations through health services, social protection systems, and community-based platforms.
Research and innovation to identify new approaches and interventions: This portfolio focuses on research and product development to identify solutions to optimize maternal health and nutrition and support the physical growth and neurodevelopment of young children. Priority areas include developing new approaches to anemia prevention and treatment and research to inform next-generation nutritional products during pregnancy and lactation, such as multiple micronutrient supplements (MMS) and balanced energy and protein (BEP) supplementation.
Global Nutrition Targets
Nutrition Action Classification across all goals
Enabling
- Financial
- Operational
- Leadership and governance
- Research monitoring and data
Policy
- Food environment
- Food supply chain
- Consumer knowledge
- Nutrition care services
Impact
- Undernutrition
- Diet
- Obesity and diet-related NCDs
- Food and nutrition security
N4G themes covered by goals
- Food
- Health
- Resilience
- Data
- Financing
Total funding and costs across all goals
Funders | Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation |
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Funding mechanism | Self-funded |
Cost secured | Fully secured |
Total costs estimated | Yes, and the amount publicly disclosed |
Currency | (USD) - United States dollar |
Cost amount | 922,000,000.0 |
$USD equivalent | 922,000,000.0 (World Bank average exchange rate for 2021) |