Global Nutrition Report 2015
Author: IFPRI
Year: 2015
Resource type: Report
Children whose growth is stunted, people who don’t get enough vitamins and minerals for a healthy life, adults who are overweight and obese—malnutrition takes many forms and affects every country on earth. A problem of staggering size, malnutrition is widespread enough to threaten the world’s sustainable development ambitions.
The Global Nutrition Report 2015 is a report card on the world’s nutrition—globally, regionally, and country by country—and on efforts to improve it. It assesses countries’ progress in meeting global nutrition targets established by the World Health Assembly. It documents how well countries, aid donors, NGOs, businesses, and others are meeting the commitments they made at the major Nutrition for Growth summit in 2013. And it spells out the actions that proven effective in combating malnutrition in all its forms.
The 2015 report makes it clear that global progress to reduce malnutrition has been slow and uneven. Nearly half of all countries face multiple serious burdens of malnutrition such as poor child growth, micronutrient deficiency, and adult overweight and obesity. No country is on track to achieve the global nutrition targets established by the World Health Assembly. Some countries, however, have made notable progress and the Report seeks to understand the factors that contributed to improvements.
The second in an annual series, the Global Nutrition Report 2015 also highlights the critical relationship between climate change and nutrition, as well as the pivotal role business can play in advancing nutrition. It considers how countries can build food systems that are more nutrition friendly and sustainable.
With a wealth of data and analysis, the report aims to improve accountability among the governments, institutions, businesses, and others whose actions affect people’s nutrition. It is accompanied by extensive supplementary online data, including nutritional profiles for 193 countries, 6 regions, and 22 subregions.
The full report, summary report and a powerpoint presentation are available here.
Downloads
Global-Nutrition-Report-2015-full.pdf (PDF, 7.1mb)
Global-Nutrition-Report-2015-synposis.pdf (PDF, 878kb)
GNR2015presentation.pptx (PowerPoint, 10.3mb)
More like this
NEX: 2014 Global Nutrition Report: Actions and Accountability to Accelerate the World’s Progress on Nutrition
The Global Nutrition Report (GNR) has produced high quality nutrition profiles of all countries. To download the report for your country, and read the GNR in full, go to...
NEX: 2016 Global Nutrition Report From Promise to Impact: Ending Malnutrition by 2030
By Lawrence Haddad, Corinna Hawkes and Emorn Udomkesmalee, Global Nutrition Report Independent Expert Group Co-Chairs Ending malnutrition by 2030 is a lot to ask, but the...
FEX: Global Nutrition Report
This Global Nutrition Report (GNR) is the first in an annual series. It tracks worldwide progress in improving nutrition status, identifies bottlenecks to change, highlights...
FEX: UN Global Action Plan (GAP) Framework for Child Wasting and the Asia and Pacific Region
View this article as a pdf Lisez cet article en français ici By Harriet Torlesse, Roland Kupka, Warren T K Lee, Britta Schumacher and Angela de Silva Harriet Torlesse...
en-net: Nutrition Commitments and Accountability
As a means of increasing accountability, there is increasing discussion in the nutrition arena, and wider world of sustainable development, about the need for...
FEX: Tackling the double burden of malnutrition in low and middle-income countries: response of the international community
Research By Alexandra Rutishauser-Perera Alexandra Rutishauser-Perera is a Humanitarian Nutrition Adviser with Save the Children. She has ten years of experience of public...
NEX: Nourishing the Sustainable Development Goals: Global Nutrition Report 2017
In this fourth Global Nutrition Report (GNR), significant burdens of three key forms of malnutrition (child stunting, anaemia in women of reproductive age and overweight in...
FEX: Nutrition funding: The missing piece of the puzzle
News Summary of report* A recent report by Generation Nutrition, a coalition of 85 civil society organisations, describes both why funding matters to nutrition and the...
NEX: UN Decade of Action on Nutrition: Brazil, Ecuador and Italy make commitments
View this article as a pdf Lisez cet article en français ici Trudy Wijnhoven is a Nutrition Officer and the technical focal point for the UN Decade of Action on...
FEX: Technical brief on the cost of malnutrition
Summary of research1 Location: Global What we know: Poor nutrition carries a significant economic burden at individual, national and global levels and prevents poverty...
NEX: Championing nutrition in Gabon
An interview with Yves Fernand Manfoumbi, Gabon's Minister of Agriculture, Livestock and the GRAINE Programme1 from October 2016 to February 201). As Minister, Manfoumbi...
FEX: Transforming media coverage of nutrition in Kenya
By Titus Mung'ou Lisez cet article en français ici At the time of writing, Titus Mung'ou was the Advocacy and Communications Manager at Action Against Hunger (ACF) and...
FEX: An investment framework for nutrition: Reaching the global targets for stunting, anaemia, breastfeeding and wasting
Summary of research* Location: Global What we know: Child malnutrition has lifelong consequences for heath, human capital, economic development, prosperity and equity. Global...
FEX: The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2021
View this article as a pdf The Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the United Nations Children's Fund...
FEX: A global perspective on improving the diets of infants and young children
View this article as a pdf Lisez cet article en français ici Grainne Moloney is Senior Nutrition Advisor at UNICEF headquarters, New York Linda Shaker Berbari is...
FEX: Nutrition for Growth Summit 2021
View this article as a pdf The Tokyo Nutrition for Growth (N4G) Summit was held in December 2021 under the leadership of the Government of Japan. It was the third global...
NEX: Moving towards multi-sector programming in Mauritania
Moving towards multi-sector programming in Mauritania Mohamed Ould Saleck is the coordinator of the National Nutrition Programme at the Ministry of Social Affairs, Childhood...
FEX: What does nutrition-sensitive programming mean for WFP?
By Kathryn Ogden, Geraldine Lecuziat, Mutinta Hambayi, Quinn Marshall, Ali Elnawawi and Josephine Lofthouse (WFP nutrition team, Rome) The WFP team acknowledge colleagues from...
FEX: Higher heights: a greater ambition for maternal and child nutrition in South Asia
Research Summary 1 Poor nutrition in early life threatens the growth and development of children, which has a knock-on effect on the sustainable development of nations. This...
FEX: Linking agriculture with nutrition within SDG2: making a case for a dietary diversity indicator
By Anna Lartey Anna Lartey is Director of FAO's Nutrition Division within the Economic and Social Development Department at FAO in Rome. She was a Professor of Nutrition at...
Reference this page
IFPRI (2015). Global Nutrition Report 2015. www.ennonline.net/globalnutritionreport2015
(ENN_4953)