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Model Mothers work to combat malnutrition in Mozambique

Thierry Delvigne-Jean, UNICEF

Model Mothers prepare a fortified meal | © UNICEF Mozambique/2008/ Machiana

© UNICEF Mozambique/2008/ Machiana

"Model Mothers" demonstrate how to prepare a fortified meal for children at the Lumbo health center on Ilha de Mocambique.

NAMPULA, Mozambique (October 8, 2008) — It is mid-morning in Ilha de Moçambique, a small island off the coast of Nampula Province. Anabela Muchuza, a nutrition technician, makes her rounds in the mother-and-child ward of the island's main health center. The giggles of a baby girl draw her attention to the back of the room.

Suhura Vasco has brought her daughter, Muaziza, to the ward because she is losing weight. "She wasn't growing properly," says Vasco.

Like approximately 24 percent of children under the age of five in Mozambique, Muaziza is underweight for her age. (Some 41 percent also suffer stunted growth due to inadequate diet.) Like so many other children, her condition is due partially to inadequate access to nutritional education.

"Many mothers don't know how to prepare a nutritious meal; that's why nutritional education is a fundamental part of our national nutrition program," explains Muchuza.

Mothers teach mothers

After her rounds, Muchuza heads for the nearby Lumbo Health Center. Many mothers with their young children are already queuing in front of the main building.

In the shade of the courtyard, a group of "Model Mothers" are beginning a demonstration, led by Rosa Ernesto. Ernesto has been a midwife in the mother-and-child unit at this health center for the past 12 years.

Mother feeds 15-month-old Lacencia | © UNICEF/NYHQ2000-0175/Pirozzi

© UNICEF/NYHQ2000-0175/Pirozzi

Lecencia, a 15-month-old girl whose hair has turned red, a symptom of severe malnutrition, is spoon-fed by her mother, Lara.

Model Mothers groups are composed of volunteers who agree to teach other mothers good nutrition habits. The approach is part of a community-outreach strategy aimed at improving nutritional practices in rural areas.

"We show mothers how to make the best use of foods that they can easily find here in the market, such as eggs, groundnuts, maize, flour, vegetables, sugar, salt, local fruit and others," explains Ernesto.

Need for interventions

The recent increase in food prices is likely to exacerbate any problems by forcing vulnerable households to buy more affordable but less nutritious food. This will result in higher levels of vitamin and mineral deficiency, particularly among young children.

In response, UNICEF has invested an additional $3 million dollars in support of the government's nutrition program, with the goal of scaling up therapeutic and supplementary feeding interventions in collaboration with other UN agencies and national partners.

Emidio Machiana contributed to this story.

 

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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