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Immediate action needed to avert crisis for Ethiopia's children

Indrias Getachew, UNICEF

Jamala and Chaltu in Ethiopia | © US Fund for UNICEF/2008/Richard Alleyne

© US Fund for UNICEF/2008/Alleyne

Jamala and her severely malnourished child, Chaltu, receive referral from a UNICEF-supported health post in Agudora village to a nearby therapeutic feeding center in Harar, Ethiopia.

HARAR, Ethiopia (Updated July 6, 2008) — Mubarek weighed barely eight pounds when he arrived at the Kuno Alimena Health Post in Ethiopia's drought-affected Gurage Zone. His weight would be average for a newborn baby, but as a toddler, he weighs approximately one-third of what he should. His diagnosis is severe acute malnutrition.

Still, Mubarek was lucky; his mother brought him to the weekly UNICEF-supported therapeutic feeding program that has been set up to save the lives of severely malnourished children. He did not have medical complications that would require clinical treatment and was able to begin home-based care, receiving weekly rations of ready-to-use therapeutic foods.

But Mubarek's twin brother was not so fortunate. He died even before his mother could get help.

International appeal for help

Children are the most vulnerable to nutritional deficits and the first to succumb when there is not enough food at home. Those with severe acute malnutrition have a 25 to 50 percent chance of dying if they don't receive proper treatment.

UNICEF Deputy Executive Director Hilde F. Johnson visited Guraghe Zone during her recent trip to drought-affected areas of southern Ethiopia. She concluded her trip by calling for immediate help to feed malnourished children and their families.

UNICEF Deputy Executive Director Hilde Johnson in Kembata Tembaro, Ethiopia | © UNICEF Ethiopia/2008/Getachew

© UNICEF Ethiopia/2008/Getachew

UNICEF Deputy Executive Director Hilde Johnson speaks with the mother of two severely malnourished children at a UNICEF-supported center in Kembata Tembaro, near Ethiopia's Gurage Zone. 
 

UNICEF correspondent Chris Niles reports on UNICEF Deputy Executive Director Hilde Johnson’s trip to drought-ravaged Ethiopia. 
 media_real.gif Low | High

"The situation in the hardest hit areas is extremely serious," said Johnson. "Children are now at risk of dying in numbers in several areas if help is not provided urgently. The government and partners are doing their utmost to help, but needs are not being met with adequate speed. More resources need to be provided."

 
Swift response needed

Therapeutic feeding alone will not be enough to address the nutritional needs of children affected by the drought. If Mubarek's mother does not have enough food to feed him when he returns home, chances are that he will slip back into malnutrition.

For now, the health post has enough supplies to feed Mubarek. However, UNICEF could face a shortage of supplies to meet the needs of severely malnourished children in drought-affected areas.

UNICEF is the main provider of therapeutic feeding products in Ethiopia. The agency and its partners—including other UN agencies and non-governmental organizations—are working closely with the Government of Ethiopia to respond swiftly and effectively to the crisis.

"There is no food"

A mother and her severely malnourished child in Kembata Tembaro, Ethiopia | © UNICEF Ethiopia/2008

© UNICEF Ethiopia/2008

A mother and her severely malnourished child at a UNICEF-supported therapeutic feeding center in Kembata Tembaro, one of the areas hardest hit areas by drought and the food crisis in Ethiopia.

The Government of Ethiopia estimates that 75,000 children under the age of five in 124 drought-affected districts are severely malnourished, and that 4.6 million people are in immediate need of humanitarian aid.

UNICEF needs $28 million in funding to meet the immediate needs of children and women throughout the affected areas and $21.3 million for mitigation and preparedness in broader vulnerable areas of the country.

"We talked to mothers and fathers, grandmothers and grandfathers and all actors in the field," said Johnson. "This picture was confirmed by all of them and a clear message was conveyed: There is no food. The assistance needs to be taken to scale and it has to happen urgently."

 

WHAT YOUR MONEY CAN BUY


$19 can buy a practical and easy to transport scale used to monitor children's weight.

$42 can buy 700 sachets of Oral Rehydration Salts to help children combat dehydration.

$445 can provide one ton of UNIMIX, a super formulated supplementary food for infants and older children.

$1,120 can provide a rotary-drum salt iodization machine to provide salt which protects children from preventable mental disability.
 

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