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Nutrition

Chicken sauce

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• Chicken sauce

• Chicken sauce

 Ingredients

-One kilogram of chicken

-5 large green bell pepper

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-3 large red bell pepper

-3 large yellow bell pepper

-One large fresh carrots

-2 tablespoonfuls of salt

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– Seasoning

-2 small size of ginger and garlic

-2 tablespoonful of onion

powder

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-2 tablespoonfuls of black

pepper

-One bottle of vegetable oil

-2 tablespoonfuls of curry

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powder

-One large scotch bonnet

pepper

– One cornstarch

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Preparation

-Wash and cut chicken into small sizes. Transfer it into a bowl. Add some curry powder

 black pepper, salt, seasoning, onion powder, ginger garlic and mix properly. Let it marinade for 10 minutes.

– Dice the onion, bell peppers, carrots, scotch bonnet pepper and set aside.

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– Heat up some oil in a pan, add some vegetable oil and let it heat up.

-Add the diced onions and fry for two minutes.

Add the marinated chicken and fry until it becomes pale. Add some water and let it bowl for five minutes.

-Add the diced carrots and let it simmer for two minutes then add the bell peppers. Adjust with some seasonings if neces­sary.

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-Mix two tablespoonfuls of cornstarch with water and add it to the sauce. This helps to thicken the sauce. Stir and let it simmer for 5 minutes.

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Nutrition

Benefits of eating cabbage

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Some fresh cabbage
Some fresh cabbage

Cabbage may not be the most attractive vegetable, but it is full of nutritional benefits that can keep the body strong and healthy-from boosting your immune system to improving digestion.

This common leafy green vegetable comes in a range of colours, shapes and sizes that you can use for soup, salad, sandwiches and more.  It can be eaten raw or stir-fried.

-Fights inflammation

Cabbages contains anthocyanins, which are naturally occurring antioxidants. Anthocyanins does not only add colour to fruits but rather reduce inflammation. A research showed that people who eat cabbages has lower inflammation levels than those who do not eat.

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– Keeps one strong

Vitamin C, also known as ascorbic acid, does a lot of work in the body. It helps make collagen and boosts the immune system. It also helps your body absorb iron from plant-based foods.

– Improves digestion

Cabbages contains phytosterols (plant sterols) and insoluble fibre. These help keeps the digestive system healthy and bowel movements regular. It fuels the good bacteria in your gut that protects your immune system.

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– Protects your heart

The anthocyanins found in cabbage help with more than inflammation. Research suggests they reduce your risk of heart disease.

Scientists have found 36 different kinds of anthocyanins in cabbage, which could make it an excellent option for cardiovascular health.

– Lowers blood pressure

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Potassium is a mineral and electrolyte that helps your body control blood pressure. One cup of red cabbage can produce a healthy amount of potassium — as much as 6 per cent of your recommended daily value. This could help lower your blood pressure, reducing your risk for heart disease.

-Lowers cholesterol

Cabbage contains two substances — fibre and phytosterols (plant sterols) — that compete with cholesterol to be absorbed by your digestive system. They wind up reducing your bad cholesterol levels and improving your health.

– Maintains bone health and healthy blood clotting

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Vitamin K is essential to our well-being. Without it, you’d be at risk of developing bone conditions like osteoporosis, and your blood wouldn’t be able to clot properly. According to research, eating cabbage everyday keep our bones strong and blood cells clotting well.- clevelandclinic.org

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Nutrition

 Malnutrition as a leadership challenge

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A malnourished child

Malnutrition persists in Ghana not because solutions are unknown, but because leadership has not consistently elevated nutrition as a national priority. Despite the availability of evidence-based interventions, malnutrition remains under-addressed in policy implementation and financing decisions. This gap reflects a broader leadership challenge that must be urgently addressed.

Nutrition outcomes are shaped by decisions across multiple sectors: health, agriculture, education, sanitation, and social protection. Without strong political leadership to coordinate these sectors, efforts remain fragmented and impact is limited. Policies exist, but implementation is often weak due to competing priorities and insufficient accountability.

High-level leadership is essential to place nutrition at the centre of development planning. This includes ensuring adequate budget allocations, setting measurable targets, and monitoring progress at the highest levels of government. Parliament has a critical role to play in holding institutions accountable for nutrition outcomes, just as it does for economic performance.

International experience is instructive. Countries that have significantly reduced malnutrition have done so through sustained political commitment, often led by heads of government or senior ministers. Nutrition was treated as a development accelerator rather than a welfare issue.

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In Ghana, leadership for nutrition must be strengthened at both national and sub-national levels. District assemblies, in particular, are pivotal in translating policy into action, yet they often lack the authority or resources to prioritize nutrition effectively.

Malnutrition undermines human capital development and constrains economic growth. Leaders must recognise that failing to address it carries long-term costs for the nation. Political leadership that champions nutrition will not only save lives but also strengthen Ghana’s development trajectory.

Ending malnutrition is achievable, but only if leaders take ownership of the challenge. Nutrition must be seen not as a sectoral concern but as a national development priority that demands decisive and sustained leadership.

Key Policy Recommendations: The Office of the President should establish a High-Level Nutrition Coordination Council, chaired by the Vice President, bringing together Ministers from Health, Agriculture, Education, Gender, and Local Government to meet quarterly and drive cross-sectoral action. The Ministry of Finance must mandate that at least 5 per cent of each sector ministry’s budget includes nutrition-sensitive interventions with measurable targets. Parliament should create a bi-partisan Nutrition Caucus to champion nutrition legislation and hold the Executive accountable through annual review sessions. District Chief Executives (DCEs) should be given performance contracts that include nutrition outcome indicators, with nutrition coordinators appointed at all 261 district assemblies. The National Development Planning Commission (NDPC) must integrate nutrition targets into the next Medium-Term Development Plan with clear accountability frameworks linking national commitments to district-level delivery.

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Feature article by Women, Media and Change under its Nourish Ghana: Advocating for Increased Leadership to Combat Malnutrition project

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