Over 10,000 severely malnourished children now treated in Ethiopia

Date Published: 18/07/2008 09:50

11,800 children suffering from severe acute malnutrition have been admitted to MSF programmes in the Oromiya and Southern Nations and Nationalities People’s (SNNP) regions of southern Ethiopia.

“Given the size of this emergency, the primary focus of MSF teams has been to try and save severely malnourished children, who are the most at risk,” says Jean de Cambry, MSF Emergency Coordinator. “Now we are starting to care for moderately malnourished children as well.” Supplementary food rations – made up of a corn and soya blend with oil and sugar – are being given every two weeks to moderately malnourished children and their families.

Food distributions are also starting this week in 12 locations of Siraro district, Oromiya region. “During one week, our teams will distribute 25 kg of food rations to an estimated 12,500 children who are either moderately malnourished or at risk of malnutrition,” explains Abdel Kader Tlidjane, Coordinator in Siraro. “We hope this will protect them from falling into severe malnutrition and keep them healthy.”

In the meantime, MSF is continuing its work in 5 'stabilisation centres', where medical teams provide 24-hour medical care to severely malnourished children suffering from complications such as malaria or pneumonia. In order to treat as many children as possible, a network of 47 outreach therapeutic programs (OTPs) provide therapeutic food and medical care on an outpatient basis. So far, 10,062 children have been cared for in the OTPs and an additional 1,724 had to be hospitalised in the MSF stabilisation centres. 121 children have died after their admission to nutritional programmes.

“While the rhythm of weekly admissions is stabilising in certain areas, in others such as Shashemene and Shalla districts of Oromiya region, and Kindo Dindaye, Kacha Bira, Hadero, and Tambaro districts of SNNP region, we keep admitting more patients from one week to the other,” adds de Cambry. “In Kambata zone, we had the past three weeks 734; 1,143 and 1,300 new weekly admissions. We really cannot foresee when it will slow down.”

In some areas of SNNP region, the number of severely malnourished children treated by MSF strikingly reaches up to 11% of the total population aged under 5 years old – MSF usually starts a nutritional programme if 3% are found. In several areas, teams have also cared for a number of malnourished adults, which is a worrying sign.

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12:38 AM, Fri Sep 03, 2010

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