Tag: impact

  • FirstBank reviews impact of CSR efforts

    FirstBank reviews impact of CSR efforts

    To reposition for 2016, FirstBank of Nigeria has reviewed some of its corporate social investments in the past few years in critical sectors to fulfill its brand promise, writes ADEDEJI ADEMIGBUJI.

    In recent years, corporate organisations have shown growing interest in corporate social responsibility(CSR). Unlike in recent time when their  goals were to make sales, maximise profit, now they are concern about making impact on the enviroment through various interventions.

    As a result, some companies have made CSR an important part of their brand promise and contribute to national growth in the areas of education, health, agriculture, among others.

    In the light of this, several companies from telecommunications, fast moving consumer goods industry, set aside some budgets called ‘corporate social investment’ to support societial needs.

    One of Nigeria’s oldest brands, FirstBank of Nigeria recently reveals how much it has supported research in nine higher higher institutions. While reviewing its CSR efforts, the bank stated that with its mission to set the ‘gold standard’ of customer experience, excellence in financial solutions across sub-saharan Africa with vision to be a partner of first choice in building future for people and communities where it operates, it has been promoting educational development in Nigeria, driving and sustaining the economy through academic research.

    The bank said it has expressed these brand promises encoded in its mission and vision through the take-off of the Uyo Endowment Fund in Petroleum Engineering, the FUTA Endowment in Computer Science with focus on some of the research done by the Professorial Chair, Dr. B.K. Alese. The latest in social investment is Samuel Asabia Endowment in Business Ethics in the University of Lagos, which is about to take off

    The Group Head, Marketing and Corporate Communications, First Bank, Mrs. Folake Ani-Mumuney, said: “We will always deliver the ultimate ‘gold standard’ of value and excellence. Our financial services knowledge and practices lead the market in ensuring that we understand our customers and surpass expectations to strive for a better way of delivering first-class service and experience.

    “FirstBank of Nigeria Limited established its endowment structure to complement the Federal Government’s efforts in the development and advancement of tertiary education in Nigeria. The Endowment Structure necessitates the funding of research projects in federal universities, selected around the six geographical regions of the country. The funds were set up in various departments as approved by the Bank’s Management to facilitate research work in the endowed universities.”

    She said FirstBank Endowment Programme was initiated in 1994  has professorial endowments in nine federal universities each located in the different geopolitical zones of the country.  Currently, the bank’s total endowment portfolio is N450 million.

    According to Ani-Mumuney, the bank engaged its sister company FBN Capital to manage the investment portfolio of the various endowments to ensure maximum yield for each endowment investment in order to promote research and learning in the universities.

    “Each Professorial Endowment usually has a professorial chair occupant selected through a rigorous but transparent process to ensure qualified candidates are engaged for the research. Candidates for the Chair are sourced from within the affected Department of the University. He/she may not necessarily be a substantive Professor but not less than a senior lecturer. The University’s representative on the Board of Trustees for the Endowment Fund is empowered to advertise, select and interview candidates and thereafter appoint an occupant for the professorial chair,” she said.

    She said some of these CSR projects have impacted on the selected schools for global competitiveness. “Since the launch of the FBN FUTA Endowment Fund, it has witnessed a series of research projects that have resulted in knowledge creation and dissemination carefully articulated in organised public lectures and integrated into policies that have served as solutions to existing peculiar concerns in the country. One of the public lectures was delivered on April, 2014 and themed Security Issues in Nigeria: Getting Ready for The Digital Challenge.

    “The bank’s unflagging commitment to promoting educational development through the FBNFUTA Endowment Fund has positioned FUTA as a citadel of excellence in the global competitive stage. This was evidenced in the feat achieved by the FBN FUTA Professorial Chair Occupant and his associates in the Computer Science Department at the Eighth International Conference for Internet Technology and Secured Transactions (ICITST-2013) in London, United Kingdom in December 2013,” she noted.

  • Aigbogun happy with Confed Cup impact on Wolves

    Aigbogun happy with Confed Cup impact on Wolves

    Warri Wolves and Enyimba FC it seems are the only teams that recovered from the distraction of the continental games from early on in the season with the sides sitting 3rd and 1st on the NPFL log after 31 round of matches.

    Reflecting on the impact of his club’s CAF Confederation Cup adventure and its effect on their League run, Coach of the Seasiders, Paul Aigbogun insists the backlog of games had no negative effect and neither did it put the players under any form of pressure.

    ”I was not a distraction to the league but of there was a backlog of games to play which we did. In a sense the situation had a grea impact on the team as we were able to make the best of them and its helped us to our current position on the table” the Coach told www.footballlive.ng

  • Young women-farmers making impact

    Young women-farmers making impact

    A new generation of young women farmers are springing up. They are educated, dynamic and doing well in the market. The new breed women-farmers are not looking at agric in the conventional hoe and cutlass subsistence way, they are bringing innovation and entrepreneurship into it, Daniel Essiet reports.

    While many young people in Nigeria dream of getting well-paid jobs, Chief Executive, Honeysuckles Cynthia Mosunmola Umoru, a zoology graduate, an alumnus of the Pan African University under the Enterprise Development Center (CEM), headed for the farm.  She grew up seeing farmers raise crops, and livestock, living wretched lives. But  she  wasn’t  convinced  they  were doing  farming  the right way. She had big dreams.

    She had bought a large piece of land and started a large-scale farming, approaching farming as a business.

    Today, she  is  seen  as a model as was   elected to the Ashoka Fellowship in 2011. Ashoka Fellows are leading social entrepreneurs who have innovative solutions to social problems and the potential to change patterns across society. They work in over 70 countries around the globe in every area of human need. Umoru belongs to this club of the exalted.

    It was in the university that Cynthia gave her interest in agriculture more attention. She took courses in fisheries, and multi-level marketing, and ran a successful cake and cookie business. Cynthia also realised how useful mini-livestock farming could be for peaking young peoples’ interest in the profession of agriculture. Not able to completely divorce herself from the big industries that often appeal to bright youth, however, Cynthia also participated in an internship at ExxonMobil while at university. After graduation,she  launched Honeysuckles PTL Ventures with the primary aim of selling processed food produce. Soon after launching, Cynthia got the opportunity to supply dressed chicken and catfish to one of the fastest growing food retail chains in the country, when the quick service restaurant industry was emerging in Nigeria. However, scarcity and inconsistent quality led Umoru to begin researching production with the intention of a backward integration in preparation for adequate positioning on the food supply chain. She launched a farm to meet the need.

    At ten years in 2014, Honeysuckles currently focuses on high-quality food products using modern packaging and fast delivery, and has its own farms and ponds. The success earned Umoru, the Business Owner of the Year award, a category of the Future Awards; highly esteemed in Nigeria for recognising talent in the younger generation.

    For her, the   journey has been quite difficult. It took her five years to gain relevance. As a young entrepreneur, in her very early days, she lost a lot of the seed capital she got from financial mentors to poor and bad business decisions she  made because there was no one to talk to. She learnt   the lesson a hard. Today, the story is different. She is very successful. As a result, she is determined to show young people that farming can be glamorous and good fortune for them  to trade places with the business executive in the large conglomerate and also the bank’s middle management cadre, which is the initial attraction for most young graduates .

    She is  now focusing on ways to get a new generation of young people interested in and successful at modern agriculture. She makes the rounds of schools in and around Lagos, speaking before hundreds of high school and university students.

    In fact, in a year-long apprenticeship with her Honeysuckles PTL Ventures, those that choose may rotate through all aspects of the value chain, from production to processing to dealing with the final corporate client. Those with their own agribusinesses learn modern skills and ideas to incorporate into their endeavor, while the high school and university students begin to realise that farming does not have to look like their antiquated ideas.

    Tosin Awoyinka is a graduate of Federal University of Technology Minna, and  Federal University of Technology Akure, .She read  agric engineering. Awoyinka started agro business  with a bold dream – transform her life and  others. Through creativity and persistence, she is gradually building  an agro enterprise of her dream.She into crop production,aquaculture, poultry and processing and grow crops under greenhouses. As a woman who founded and built her  own business from scratch, she know how difficult it can be to turn a dream into a lucrative business.

    She had challenges but with faith, patience, gratitude and keeping her eye on the purpose, accepting variations of ideals,she has been able to make it.An agric engineer, Awoyinka, is collaborating with other agro entrepreneurs to and raise awareness on opportunities for young farmers in agriculture. She part of a business coaching program where she  has the opportunity to connect with dozens upon dozens of like-minded entrepreneurs who are also eager to give back to others.

    An entrepreneur to watch is Betty Afolabi. A young fisheries graduate, University of Ado-Ekiti. Ekiti State,she comes from a long line of entrepreneurs.

    A member, Nigeria Agribusiness Group, Cross River State and Secretary, Cross River State women in aquaculture, Miss  Afolabi,  is  co operator of Bangadonase Nigeria limited,based in Calabar,Cross River State.

    She always knew she will go into business.  — Once the right idea presented itself of course. In her’ case, the right idea came in the form of fish farming. “I started fully in 2010 by hatching fish at the back of my house and also rearing 20 chicks.” She has started a fish business with a partner in Calabar, Mrs. Glory Ado Awe ,also a fisheries  graduate, where  they cultivate and sell grown fish to the  market. In her’ mind the importance of local food cannot be overstated both in regards to the goals of her business and the future of agriculture as a whole.

    Afolabi and her partner are happy that are able to produce good fish.

    Like any other agricultural operation, she faced typical challenges, particularly, getting accepted as a female farmer. But she had to prove her worth in the field. Right now, her   challenges are lack of finance for small scale farmer. The other is unfavourable agricultural policy. This makes exporting her product difficult. In Cross River State, she and other women involved in agriculture have formed a union called Women in Aquaculture. It comprises of over 100 women doing fish business, processing to production. The  other ones are reducing the chance of mortality failure and balancing an increase in production with the ability to sell everything they grow. That being said, she is optimistic about the future of her business. Right now, she is into fingerlings production and also processing of catfish for sale. She is also into shrimps and also consultancy.

    Along the line, she found successful women entrepreneurs are also everyday entrepreneurs.

    Also that people who run businesses are making huge contributions but may not be necessarily brand names.

    She sees the successes of those ventures and realise that there’s a real possibility that their startup can do well. So the female agro entrepreneurs ’re taking a different approach.

    Across the country, executive women   are ramping up agro entrepreneurship opportunities, as they pursue their dreams of lucrative innovation, and startup glory.

    Some of the women involved in agriculture and food production, hold  international  MBAs that   are part of a striking trend among business school students toward entrepreneurship. Increasingly, they are rushing to apply their business skills to their own enterprises. For them, agro entrepreneurship is entering the mainstream in the economy and therefore it’s starting to enter the mainstream in the business schools.

    For instance, Lagos Business School has started something on agribusiness management and this has served as the primary impetus toward entrepreneurship.

    As tech-driven agro business companies are spreading, highly ranked business schools are right on their heels.

    Chief Executive Officer, Melinda-D Global Farms, George Omololu Akinbi said entry of young female graduate into agriculture  portend a greatfuture for the nation.

    According to him, young women pursue agriculture with great vigour. He believes  agriculture is expanding the horizons of  young ladies who want  to become farmers. He look forward to seeing these young women flourish.

    Meanwhile, West Africa Agricultural Productivity Programme (WAAPP) has urged youths to harness the vast business opportunities in the agricultural sector rather than seek paid employment. Assistant Project Accountant of WAAPP, Mr Godffery Onuegbu,  made at a training workshop for 50 selected youths and women on cassava and fruit juice processing technology, in Awka.

    “We have enough agricultural raw materials available in the southeast that could change the fortunes of our youths and women roaming the streets for employment.

    “A lot of fruits, including oranges, pineapples, pawpaw, mangoes, among others are rotting away in the region which can be harnessed into fruit juice.

    “The by-product from fruit processing can also be converted to animal feed.

    “Nigeria is a ready market for all these produce but the issue is that our youths do not show interest in the business.

    “I encourage the youths to look inwards in the area of agriculture instead of applying for jobs all over the place,” Onuegbu said.

    Technical Assistant to the National Project Coordinator of WAAPP, Mrs Grace Samuel,  said interested youths could be linked to funding institutions.

    Samuel explained that WAAPP was collaborating with the Rural Finance Institution Building Programme to provide grants, not exceeding five million naira, for cassava and fruit juice processing.

    She urged the state governments in the zone to develop an agricultural framework that would encourage the training of the youth in fruit and cassava processing.

  • ‘How NNPC’s measures ‘ll impact on economy’

    ‘How NNPC’s measures ‘ll impact on economy’

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) yesterday said the measure the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) is adopting to provide petroleum products for the country will help the country .

    Its General Secretary, Dr. Peter Ozo Eson described the strategies as “correct measure” that will attract private investors to build refineries in the country.

    The corporation is planning to remain the sole importer of fuel in the nation. It is also strategising to provide land within the premises of existing refineries for private investors to build new ones. NNPC is currently carrying out Turn Around Maintenance (TAM) on its refineries to attain their optimum utilisation.

    “These are correct measures, if we get the domestic refineries to work, and we expand the capacity of domestic refining by building new refineries and using incentives to make private investors to also build refineries,” he said during a telephone interview.

  • Nutrition: Impact of food on health

    Introduction

    Wash fruits and food thoroughly before eating. This removes the chemicals and the germs that may be attached to the fruits.

    1. j) Some fruits and vegetables only require gentle cooking in order to preserve the vitamins and proteins.

    How do you know what is polluted?

    1. a) Read the labels on the food that you buy from the stores.
    2. b) Read or ask for the source of the food and preservatives on the food if possible.
    3. c) If unsure, stick with natural products. The truth is, you may not be able to avoid pollution totally but you can reduce its consumption. You don’t need the chemicals.

    Note: Even where, the food had not passed through voluntary chemical process, the environmental pollution such as biological products (bacteria, virus etc), fumes and industrial wastes being released into the environment may contaminate the food.

    For children, the World Health Organisation says and we think this is true, that, when parents and adult lead a healthy life, it rubs on the children. Children and ill- individuals need guidance from doctors or parents and may require supplements for their food. In newborn, the breast milk remains the ultimate best food, shall we say the ultimate “fast food”. Breast milk is able to sustain such new children even up to 6 months in absence of other food if breast milk is dutifully given by the mother. Of course, this depends on the circumstances. In some, there is a need for healthy supplements. But the sooner children are introduced into healthy living, the better.

    The rule of thumb is very simple. Consider what I say under Common sense of what to eat”.

    Culture: In spite of our cultural differences across the world, the basic contents of all human foods are the same. The differences occur because of weather conditions which make some of the fruits in Asia or Africa look different from the ones Europe or America. The second point is that, the method of preparation of our food is culturally different. In the end, we are all eating the same fat, protein, water, carbohydrates and vitamins: after all we are human beings!

    Dealing with Obesity: Ideal Body Weight.

    No two individuals are completely the same. One may be short and thin, the other may be tall and fat or vice versa. Scientists and healthcare workers have been battling with the problem of ideal weight for ages. So far, we have been able to come up with a simple mathematical guide which is generally known as Body-Mass Index or BMI for short.

    BMI measures your body weight and height as follows:

    BMI = Your Weight (in Kg)

    (Your Height in Meters)2

    Scientists have measures many people and found out that many “normal” people will be between a range of 18 to 24.9

    Example: A woman of 80kg with a height of 1.6 meters will have a BMI of: 60/(1.6)2 The BMI comes to 21.48

    Using the same formula, a man of 86kg with a height of 1.9m will have a BMI of 23.82

    You can now calculate your own BMI from time to time as a guide to your ideal weight.

    Centre for Disease Control says that BMI is used as a screening tool to identify possible weight problems for adults. However, BMI is not a diagnostic tool. However, to determine if excess weight is a health risk, a healthcare provider would need to perform further assessments. These assessments might include skinfold thickness measurements, evaluations of diet, physical activity, family history, and other appropriate health screenings.

    Now, if your BMI falls between 18.5-24.9, your weight is ideal for your height. It did not say that you are thin, lean or fat but ideal for your specific height.

    Anything below 18.5, you are likely to be ill or too thin for your height.

    If your BMI is above 25 to say 29.9, you are certainly overweight.

    If your BMI is above 30, you are obese.

    The problem with obesity include the risk of heart attack, high blood pressure, some cancers (endometrial, breast, and colon), diabetes type 2, osteoarthritis, difficulty in breathing (sleepapnoea), stroke, and if necessary, difficult surgical operation.

    Here is a guide you might wish to take note of:

    Weight Status

    BMI

    Below 18.5 Underweight

    18.5 – 24.9 Normal

    25.0 – 29.9 Overweight

    30.0 and Above Obese

    Please take note that the above BMI discussion is related to adult. Please visit your doctor if you are concerned about BMI in children.

    How to lose weight;

    1. You eat minimally, as little as possible
    2. Eat as less frequently as possible (1-2times/day)
    3. Exercise as much as possible
    4. To remain reasonably healthy, eat moderate amount of fruit, vegetables and fish with the support of multivitamins and folic acid preparations. Please note that at a 70kg weight, you need an average of 2000Calories of energy per day for a woman and a man needs about 2400Calories to keep going. Depending on your size and energy requirements, you may need more or less calories. Your doctor can help with the calculations or consult a nutritionist/dietician.

    Monitoring

    1. Check your weight weekly using weighing scale (you could get a cheap one in your local store)
    2. Determine your BMI weekly. Keep a diary
    3. Have a target of ideal weight you want to reach. Aim at that figure.

    Medical intervention

    There are medications that may help you lose weight. For ethical reasons, we will not be prescribing any here. You may need to see your doctor for this.

    Dietician/Nutritionist

    These professionals may work with your medical or surgical team to help bring your weight down by recommending the appropriate food contents and amount that is suitable for you.

    They may in fact be your first point of call in the pyramid of weight loss project.

    Surgical intervention

    If the self-help method fails, then you might need the help of surgeons. Likely operations are gastric banding in which the size of your stomach is reduced to a minimum. Other form of surgery may be the removal of the area of your gut that absorbs food. The whole idea is to limit the amount of food that gets into you. Psychological intervention.

    Before you begin excessive weight loss or if the above methods do not work for you, you may need to see a psychologist or psychiatrist to assess your view on body image. Remember that weight loss is a matter of determination and sometimes there may be a distortion in the way a person sees herself or himself.

  • Nutrition: Impact of food on health

    Introduction

    Illnesses including obesity (see below for more on obesity): Because a person fails to take the right thing that is found in food or if the food gets polluted, it will harm the body. The person may therefore fall ill. Example, a person who failed to take enough protein, will be predisposed to malnutrition and vulnerable to a lot of preventable diseases. Also, if our food is lacking in some vitamins, the person may even become unwell physically (say scurvy) or mentally.

    1. c) Very Serious illnesses, like cancers, hypertension, Parkinson’s, dementia and mental illness may develop because of what we failed to eat or what we actually eat.
    2. d) Common natural foods contains majority of what we require for our needs. Clean and well prepared, (not necessarily processed in factory) fruits, vegetable, meat (not red meat which should be avoided), fish and water in the right proportion will most certainly sustain us on daily basis. This is a common sense in fact.
    3. e) We don’t need factory food, fast food or processed food to survive. This is important as these foods contain a lot of chemicals and amount of substances that we don’t need. They contain preservatives and salt that is too much for our body.
    4. f) Too much food: if we eat too much food, it means, we have taken too much energy in and of course, “excess of the earth” more that we require. The energy need to be spent in exercise, otherwise, the excess weight will ultimately drag us “down to earth”, via many diseases (obesity, diabetes mellitus, high blood pressure and stroke).

    Where is the scientific evidence? Here they are.

    The evidence in support of what we have mentioned above is staggering. Here they are.

    1.Soft drink: In a large studies (88 different studies), the association between soft drink consumption and nutrition and health outcomes were examined. It was found, a clear association of soft drink intake with increased energy intake and body weight. Soft drink intake also was associated with lower intakes of milk, calcium, and other nutrients and with an increased risk of several medical problems (for example, diabetes).

     

    Before and after birth:

    children

     The children of women who have low pre-pregnant (before becoming pregnant) weight, poor diet, low level of replacement of the home diet by the supplement, low physical activity during pregnancy and good health status will show larger increase in birth weight when their food and calories is increased. Finally, nutritional interventions during pregnancy as opposed to earlier in the life of the mother should have the higher impact on birth weight. In consequence, interventions as of pregnancy are recommended.

     

    Child survival

    From the data reviewed in research reports, it is clear that nutrition of mothers is intimately intertwined with infant health and survival. Thus, the problem of maternal malnutrition during pregnancy and during breast feeding presents a potentially and very serious obstacle to social development.

     

     Adult: Prevention of diseases later in life/Physical health

    Good evidence exists that early nutrition affects key risk factors for chronic degenerative diseases of middle and later life, such as osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease. The influence of nutrition (good food) on health status and disease supports primary, secondary, and tertiary prevention of disease and intervention strategies at each point in the process. The objective of such a preventionoriented model is to enable people to live well for longer, while minimizing chronic disability. Starting down the right path with appropriate nutrition and staying on it by eating well are important components of healthy aging.

     

     General prevention of cancer

    Good nutrition can prevent cancer. As illustrated by the evidence presented in a research review, there are numerous reasons (biological, psychological, and social), opportunities (school and community, health care, and family settings), and approaches (non-intervention and intervention) to understand and impact behaviour change in children’s diet and nutrition and weight and physical activity. It is clear that more attention should be paid to early life and early developmental phases in cancer prevention.

     

    Brain health/Mental health

    Brain development in humans is remarkably resistant to permanent damage from protein-energy malnutrition. However, specific nutrients have crucial roles in brain development. Iodine deficiency is the most important and widespread nutrient deficiency; it causes endemic cretinism, associated with deaf- mutism and cerebral palsy. Iodine deficiency during pregnancy causes both maternal and fetal hypothyroxinemia, resulting in irreversible impairment of brain development at a critical stage.

    In conclusion: Considering is said above and the evidence, a person is basically what he/she eats and what he says (word).

     

    Common sense of what to eat

     Except in the case of children or the infirm individuals and in cases of outright ignorance, you hardly need a lesson from specialist doctor to tell you what is reasonable to eat. But here is a guide.

    1. a) Avoid industrially processed food as much as possible. They contain high salt, sugar and undesirable chemicals that may be toxic to our bodies and mind.
    2. b) Avoid food that has passed through dangerous insecticides, if possible.
    3. c) Avoid “fast foods” if you can. They help you to pile the weight on
    4. d) Indulge yourself in lots fruits and vegetables. If you are vegetarian, take folic acid and multivitamin supplements especially one containing vitamin B12.
    5. e) Give yourself a pleasure in non-complex meat such as fish and chicken.
    6. f) Blood and blood-looking meat (red meat) is bad for your health. Such meat increases cancer of the colon.
    7. g) Drink water in moderation of average 1.5Liters in a day: Could be more in hot climate/weather.
    8. h) Use food supplements if required. Examples are vitamin B-Complex. But be very careful with Vitamins A, C and D. They require moderation. Ask your doctor.
    • To be continued
  • Nutrition: Impact of food on health

    Human beings and animals derive their entire make up (constituents of their body) from one source: all of our tissues, muscles, organs and so on, are derived from the earth. That is to say, what is found in us is also found on the earth that you stand on. The make-up of the earth is also our make-up. Your table salt (sodium chloride), zinc, water (H2O), sulphur, ammonia, protein fat, vitamins, nitrogen, oxygen and so forth that make up our tissues and body are all from the earth. This is why when a person dies, he or she simply split up into these different chemicals and return to the earth from where those chemicals came from originally. The cycle of earth replenishment continues and fertility of earth to feed earth inhabitants goes on as a result.

    This is the reason that if the earth is polluted, our food, air and water gets polluted then our body get polluted and then we fall ill as a result. We then fall ill because we may have eaten the food that our body needs that is now polluted for us. If the air gets polluted, the air thatwe breathe in is polluted and our tissues and organs get “polluted” and we fall ill. The same thing goes for water which is crucial for our survival.

     

    The problem of pollution

     

    There are various ways by which our food and water may be polluted.

    1. a) Chemical pollution. This can be via insecticides such as organophosphates that farmers use to control pests.
    2. b) It may also be industrial discharge from the factories and manufacturing houses that got discharged into the water ways, seas, lands and air.
    3. c) Chemical pollution may also come from transport such as air planes that discharge fuel and combustion products into the air. It may also be oil pollution into the sea by ships that sank or even the product of combustion in the course of ordinary transport. We should not forget the very common ones that pollute us by the day and nights: cars.
    4. Biological pollution: This may come from industrial activities, laboratories such as was the case in foot and mouth disease and avian flu.
    5. Pollution may also come from radiations from energy and industrial activities or even human negligence such was the case of Chernobyl nuclear accident.

    Food and water pollution may arise due to direct human additives such as attempts to legally preserve food by means of different chemicals and biological agents that the governments have approved.

    On the other hand, if the food that we eat does not contain appropriate nutrients that we need, though it comes from the earth, we will become unwell and remain unwell until those chemicals are replaced in our body.

     

    The problem with food

     

    There are four areas in which our food may be a problem for us:

    1. If we eat too small an amount at a given time or over time. Too little is not good enough.
    2. If we eat too great an amount at a given time or over time. Excess is bad.
    3. Failure to eat the right thing or right components that we need: such as vitamins or even water: those things that come from the earth.
    4. If our food does not contain the right amount of what we need: As we know in elementary school, our food must contain the right balance that is appropriate for the individual. Right amount of protein, right vitamins, water, carbohydrate, trace elements like zinc, magnesium, iodine, calcium, salt, fat and so on. Our body system requires all these to function properly and to generate the right amount of energy.

     

    The issue of fast food

     

    Fast foods are simply to be avoided as much as possible. They are what they are called: fast food that will help you to accumulate fat in perhaps, the fastest way.

    The truth and reality is that this message may not be received by all. On some occasions such as family outings, or in case when we are in dire need of food and we could not reach our favourite kitchen, we may indulge in fast food. The critical thing however is that it should not be a habit or a frequent replacement of our natural meals.

     

    Body food processing

     

    Now, the human body acts like a perfect machine. In a machine, if you put in a raw material, it gets processed by the machine and you get a product. Your product may turn out as energy.

    There may be some waste product too. We as humans, behave in the same way, as living beings. Our food is the raw material that our body needs. The ultimate product that we want is the energy to function. The one we don’t want is our sweat and the one that goes through the toilet/bathroom: the waste products.

     

    The foundation

     

    Further, we get our body make-up from our parents. Therefore, what we are and our future is determined by what our parents have eaten (including illegal drugs and alcohol) or what the parents failed to eat. Our future is already decided even before we are born.

    As a child and an adult, the way we behave, what we look like, our shape and health all depends on the food we take or the food that we did not take as mentioned above.

    The consequences of unreasonable nutrition or poor meal intake:

    1. a) Low energy: if we fail to eat the right amount that our body needs, we may not have enough energy to see us through our daily needs. Average male adult weighing 70kg, requires about 2500 Calories per day. Average adult women requires about 2000 Calories. Children and elderly require much less. If we fail to take the right amount of food, the body will start “eating” up itself and the person may lose a lot of weight and then die. On this account, we need qualified medical doctor, nurses and nutritionists to help us determine the amount of food and energy that we need.

    •To be continued

  • Impact of mobile phones, computers, TV screens, electronics on the eyes

    Between your work computer, e-reader, TV, and smart phone, how much screen time do you rack up every day? If it’s as little as two hours, you’re setting yourself up for digital eyestrain: That’s the achy, tired feeling in your eyes that occurs after a stretch of screen viewing, leading to redness, tension, and even shoulder and head pain. The Vision Council, a nonprofit group that represents the optical industry, just released its 2015 Digital Eye Strain report, which found that 93 percent of us are at risk for it. You know how everything’s a blur when you finally do look up from the screen—or how bloodshot your peepers get after lots of time staring at your laptop or phone? Exactly.

    So how can you save your sight without giving up your electronics? Take regular screen breaks. Every 10 or 20 minutes, get in the habit of looking up from the screen and finding a distant object to focus on, which gets you back to a normal blinking pattern and restores moisture. The Vision Council report calls it the 20-20-20 rule: every 20 minutes, look away from the screen for 20 seconds at something 20 feet away.

  • Church leaders refresh for greater impact

    Hundreds of ministers drawn from converged on the Fountain of Life Church, Ilupeju Lagos penultimate weekend to refresh and brainstorm on how to achieve greater productivity in the vineyard.

    This was at a leadership retreat organised by senior pastor of the church, Taiwo Odukoya.

    Odukoya said the retreat, in its 15th year, was convened for the mutual edification of leaders in an atmosphere of accountability. Speaking on “ethics in ministry”, Pastor Clem Esemowei of Triumphant Church International, London urged the church leaders to maintain their integrity when facing temptation.

    He said they cannot afford to lose their standing before God and the people who they serve.

    Pastor Godman Akinlabi of The Elevation Church facilitated the session on “the virtual church”.

    He taught on practical guides to leveraging on the platform of social media for greater efficiency in ministry.

    According to Akinlabi, the content is king in the virtual space and the church is a repository of relevant content.

    “Our voice should be the loudest,” he said.

    Speaking at an all-night that rounded off the conference, Odukoya said: “God will always give you more capacity for your assignment. We often use less.”

    He also answered myriad of questions on issues in the church in a no-holds barred way.

  • NCP ‘ll make impact, says chieftain

    NCP ‘ll make impact, says chieftain

    The National Conscience Party (NCP) has said that its presidential candidate, Martins Onovo, will win the general elections and liberate the masses from the shackles of the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP).

    NCP Publicity Secretary Tony Onye, in an interview with The Nation,said the party, which was founded by late Chief Gani Fawehinmi, has vigorously campaigned at the grassroots and would win in a free and fair election.

    He chided the PDP for clamouring to remove the Chairman, Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Prof. Attahiru Jega, insisting that the ruling party was afraid of free and fair elections.

    According to him, the NCP is solidly behind Jega on his resolve to use smart card readers for the elections, just as he warned against any plan to sack the INEC boss before the polls.

    The NCP spokesman who said: “There are a lot of things we can do because at the moment nothing has been done by the PDP government to better the lives of the citizens of Nigeria.

    “NCP is more active than it was in the days of Chief Fawehinmi. We are upholding the ideals and legacies of the late legal icon that is why we have a presidential candidate.

    “We want to deliver good governance. Nigeria even at the time of Chief Fawehinmi has gotten corrupt to the extend that those who had money bought over the votes of others.

    “They use money that belongs to the citizens to buy voters over. Fawehinmi sid not play that kind of politics and our current candidate is not playing that kind of politics.

    “It is not that the people did not vote Chief Fawehinmi but those in power bought over people’s votes. Presently we are on course to ensure that similar things do not happen.

    “Engineer Onovo is the best candidate in the race now and that is why we have been campaigning from communities. We are telling Nigerians that we will bring the needed change in the areas of security, economy, agriculture and employment. These are areas thing the present government has failed.

    “We are promising that security will be assured. People do not have to panic on the road or in their homes. It is a very simple thing which the present and past governments have failed to do.

    “We have the armed forces and other security agencies. What they need is adequate training, equipment and welfare. The money is here. We have the resources in this country.

    “The present leadership does not make security personnels happy. They owe them salaries and do not pay them well. When you pay them well, they will be able to fight and spill their blood for this nation. These are the things our candidate will address.

    “Nigeria is well blessed with resources. What we need is to stop the diversion of our resources so that the money can be effectively utilised for the benefit of all.

    “We insist that the party in power should jot do anything to discredit the electoral process. They should not try to corner votes. If people are allowed to cast their votes effectively,  definitely NCP will win. We are in support of Jega and we are saying he should be allowed to stay to conduct the elections. He does not have to go on leave for any reason because he is in better position to conduct the elections.

    “If Jega conduct the elections I know definitely they will be free and fair, PDP will be voted out and our candidate will win. Any other person that will be brought in to conduct this election will do the bidding g of the PDP and we are saying no to that.”