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Early-life exposure to environmental toxicants and child growth and development

Early-life exposure to environmental toxicants and child growth and development - Available at University of Iceland
When 
Thu, 30/03/2023 - 09:00 to 10:00
Where 
Further information 
Free admission

Speaker: Syed Moshfiqur Rahman, Uppsala University
Thursday 6 April 2023, 10.00 am CET

Register online on Zoom here

About the talk

The developmental origins of health and disease (DOHaD) hypothesis and recent evidence indicate that nutritional deficits and early-life exposure to environmental toxicants contribute to the development of metabolic syndromes later in life. Environmentally-related childhood diseases represent an enormous global public health problem, particularly in low and middle-income countries. In Bangladesh, a lower middle-income country, we have established a longitudinal population-based mother-child cohort (MINIMat; Maternal and Infant Nutrition Interventions, Matlab) in a rural sub-district called Matlab. MINIMat was a groundbreaking initiative to shed light on the relationships between exposure to environmental toxicants and metabolic diseases and nutritional and developmental delays. Considering the ambitious goals and targets of the SDGs, countries need to understand, acknowledge and prioritize issues pertaining to prevention of exposure to environmental toxins as well as focus on the promotion of adequate nutrition and child development.

About Nordic Global Health Talks

Nordic Global Health Talks is a monthly webinar series about global health from the Nordic universities. The first Thursday of each month at 10.00 am CET, you can tune in online via Zoom and listen to an interesting global health lecture from a Nordic university. It is free and open to everyone interested in knowing more about Nordic global health research, education, and collaborative projects. Nordic Global Health Talks is organised by Nordic Network on Global Health.
Each webinar will be 45 minutes: approximately 30 minutes presentation, followed by a 15 minutes Q&A.

Syed Moshfiqur Rahman, Uppsala University

Early-life exposure to environmental toxicants and child growth and development