Abstract

From the December 2009 supplement, Multiple Micronutrient Supplementation During Pregnancy in Developing Country Settings, the following figures should have been published as follows: In, “Multiple micronutrient supplementation during pregnancy in low-income countries: A meta-analysis of effects on stillbirths and on early and late neonatal mortality” by Carine Ronsmans, David J. Fisher, Clive Osmond, Barrie M. Margetts, Caroline H. D. Fall, and the Maternal Micronutrient Supplementation Study Group (MMSSG) Page 552 — Figure 5. Random effects model forest plots for effects of multiple micronutrient supplementation on early neonatal deaths. CI, confidence interval; ES, effect size. In, “Multiple micronutrient supplementation during pregnancy in developing-country settings: Policy and program implications of the results of a meta-analysis” by Roger Shrimpton, Sandra L. Huffman, Elizabeth R. Zehner, Ian Darnton-Hill, and Nita Dalmiya Page 562 — Figure 1. Average adherence to supplementation in the meta-analysis studies In, Special Issue: Research from the Institute of Nutrition of Central America and Panama (INCAP) 1949–1999, Volume 31, Number 1: The introductory article by Nevin S. Scrimshaw entitled “The Origin and Development of INCAP” inadvertently omitted some key words on page 6, second column, first paragraph. It was Fernando Viteri, who after an outstanding research career at INCAP, “… became the head of food and nutrition at PAHO/WHO, Washington and later a full professor at the University of California, Berkeley and Scientist at the Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute.”

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