UN Report on Child Malnutrition: A UN report reveals that 27% of the world’s children under 5 live in severe food poverty, with many in Africa.
Severe Food Poverty: Defined as consuming nothing or at best two out of eight recognized food groups in a day.
African Impact: Africa, particularly due to conflict, climate crises, and rising food prices, bears one-third of the global burden, with 13 of the 20 most affected countries.
Progress in Africa: Despite challenges, West and Central Africa have reduced the percentage of children in severe food poverty from 42% to 32% over the last decade.
Nutritional Interventions: UNICEF is training women in Nigeria to boost nutrient intake through home gardens and livestock rearing.
Cost of Living Crisis: Nigeria faces its worst cost of living crisis, making home-grown food vital for survival.
Tragic Consequences: Malnutrition leads to life-threatening conditions like wasting, significantly increasing child mortality rates.
Emergency Levels: The Sahel region faces emergency levels of acute malnutrition due to displacement and climate change, leading families to desperate measures for survival.
High Child Mortality: Conflict-hit regions like Sudan and Nigeria’s northwest see high child mortality due to severe malnutrition, with many children dying before reaching medical care.
Call to Action: The report emphasizes the urgent need for governments and partners to address severe food poverty and malnutrition among children in Africa.
The Associated Press has the story:
UN: A quarter of the world’s children under 5 have severe food poverty. Many are in Africa
“Not much milk comes out,” said their 38-year-old mother, Dorcas Simon, who struggles to breastfeed and has three other children. She laughed, as if to conceal the pain. “What will I give them when I don’t have food myself?”
The report, which focused on nearly 100 low- and middle-income countries, defines severe food poverty as consuming nothing in a day or, at best, two out of eight food groups the agency recognizes.
In the absence of vital nutrients, children living with “extremely poor” diets are more likely to experience wasting, a life-threatening form of malnutrition, the agency known as UNICEF said.
“When wasting becomes very severe, they are 12 times more likely to die,” Harriet Torlesse, one of the report’s authors, told The Associated Press.
In several Nigerian communities like Kaltungo in the northeast where Simon lives, UNICEF is training thousands of women in how to boost their families’ nutrient intake with cassava, sweet potato, maize, millet and vegetables grown in gardens at home, and how to rear livestock and chickens.
Aisha Aliyu, a 36-year-old mother of five, said her latest child “used to be skinny but is growing fatter” because of what they now grow at home. Hauwa Bwami, a 50-year-old mother of five, nearly lost her grandchild to kwashiorkor, a disease with severe protein malnutrition, before the UNICEF training started a year ago. Now she grows enough food that she sells to other women.
Kaltungo is in a semi-arid agricultural region where climate change has limited rainfall in recent years. Some children have died of acute malnutrition in the past because food is scarce, said Ladi Abdullahi, who trains the women.
The training “is like answered prayers for me,” Simon said in her first time with the group.
But it can be a painful lesson. Another trainee, Florence Victor, 59, watched helplessly as her nine-month-old grandchild succumbed to malnutrition in 2022.
Malnutrition also can weaken the immune system over time, leaving children vulnerable to diseases that can kill.
In the Sahel, the semiarid region south of the Sahara Desert which is a hot spot for violent extremism, there has been an increase in acute malnutrition — worse than severe food poverty — that has reached emergency levels, said Alfred Ejem, senior food security advisor with the Mercy Corps aid group in Africa.
Because of displacement and climate change, families have resorted to “bad coping mechanisms like eating leaves and locusts just to survive,” Ejem said.
In conflict-hit Sudan, children are dying of severe malnutrition in large numbers.
In Nigeria’s troubled northwest, the French medical organization Doctors Without Borders said at least 850 children died last year within 24 to 48 hours of being admitted to its health facilities.
“We are resorting to treating patients on mattresses on the floor because our facilities are full,” Simba Tirima, MSF’s Nigeria representative, said Tuesday.
Inequality also plays a role in severe food poverty among children in Africa, the new report said. In South Africa, the most unequal country in the world, roughly one in every four children is affected by severe food poverty even though it is the continent’s most developed nation.
Governments and partners must act urgently, author Torlesse said: “The work starts now.”