TO ensure that mothers and children under five do not suffer from malnutrition during this year’s “lean” season, the United States (US), through its Agency for International Development (USAID), has provided an additional $9.5 million to the United Nation’s World Food Programme (WFP).
More than 175,000 mothers and children would be benefiting from the grant from USAID’s Health, Population, and Nutrition office. The grant, according to USAID/Nigeria Mission Director, Stephen M. Haykin, augments ongoing support for humanitarian assistance in Nigeria by its Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA) and Food for Peace (FFP), and seeks to bridge a funding shortfall announced by the WFP late last month.
It will fund a blanket supplementary feeding programme to protect the nutrition status of children aged six months to five years, and lactating women among Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) and host communities of Borno State through the provision of specialised nutritious foods.
“In response to the call by WFP to meet a severe funding shortfall, the USAID is pleased to play a part in making sure that the most vulnerable of those impacted by the Boko Haram conflict are taken care of. This support will go to nine areas where the needs of mothers and their children are the greatest,” Haykin said.
The assistance will help WFP reach an additional 110,000 children under five and 65,000 pregnant and nursing mothers with specialised nutritious food commodities in nine local government areas (LGA) in Borno State.
WFP launched what is known as a Blanket Supplementary Feeding Programme aimed at preventing the further decline in nutritional status among young children suffering from moderate acute malnutrition, as well as protect the nutritional status of others, who are not yet malnourished but are at high risk.
The programme, which will distribute the nutrient-rich food monthly through the end of the rainy, or “lean,” season in August, is anticipated to significantly reduce the burden on the health system related to treating malnutrition as well as other health conditions under nutrition, consequently preventing related mortality.