Tag: malnutrition

  • UNICEF, media join forces against malnutrition

    UNICEF, media join forces against malnutrition

    Nigeria is battling with several problems, among which is child malnutrition. The future of her children is being threatened by malnutrition; a silent killer which is decimating them in millions annually. ODUNAYO OGUNMOLA reports that the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the media have just launched a campaign to tackle the menace.

    This is not the best of time for infants in Nigeria. They are exposed to disease, sanitation problems, environmental deterioration, hunger; all triggered by insurgency, in the Northeast, militancy in the Niger Delta, kidnapping in almost all states of the federation and other social ills afflicting the society.

    Malnutrition has become a threat to the survival of the Nigerian child but a campaign has just been launched by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the media to tackle the menace.

    Concern for the survival of the Nigerian child and how to find solution to the threat posed by malnutrition was the focus of a Media Dialogue organised by the UNICEF, a specialised agency of the United Nations which has welfare of children as its major mandate, for reporters in the Southwest.

    The media practitioners, who came from print, electronic, social and online platforms brainstormed with stakeholders such as officials of the UNICEF, health professionals, caregivers, policy makers and beneficiaries of the agency’s intervention where issues bordering on malnutrition were dissected.

    The UNICEF recognises the media as an important vehicle of advocacy and a strong partner to propagate the message of best nutrition practices to boost child health through editorials, documentaries, features, informed commentaries; special reports, interviews with policy makers, community workers and mothers.

    The forum reached a  consensus that malnutrition is a general problem which is not peculiar to any region in Nigeria; as virtually all the six geo-political zones are battling with the problem. As it affects children of the poor, malnutrition also afflicts children of the rich, which many would find incredible.

    The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, whose opening remarks was delivered by the Head, Child Rights Information Bureau, Federal Ministry of Information and Culture, Mrs. Rose Madu, described the problem as one that is common.

    He urged journalists to use their platforms to educate policy makers so that the right budgetary allocations are made and funds released on time to tackle the challenges of malnutrition.

    The minister, who revealed that similar forums had been held in Sokoto, Calabar, Kano and Owerri said bringing journalists together was an important step towards battling the scourge because of their roles as nation-builders.

    According to him, statistics has shown that malnutrition has become a huge threat to children both in the North and in the South; hence the need for all Nigerians to join hands with the government to save the future of the younger generation.

    UNICEF Communication Specialist in Abuja, Mr. Geoffrey Njoku, said the problem of malnutrition required urgency because of the increasing infant mortality rate attributed to it.

    He expressed shock at the findings made during a similar media dialogue held in Owerri, where it was discovered that a good number of infants in Imo State are suffering from malnutrition.

    Njoku said: “I was at the Owerri dialogue and I was shocked at the level of malnutrition of children in Imo State. In the Southwest as well, we have issues of malnutrition and Nigerians expect that reports coming out of here would help address these issues.

    “The use of social media has helped tremendously because both the Senate and the House of Representatives are talking about it; so it had become a national issue.”

    Njoku revealed that 22 per cent of children under five years in the Southwest zone have stunted growth, saying it was erroneous to believe that malnutrition only affects the northern part of the country.

    Quoting a 2013 survey, Njoku stressed that studies revealed that malnutrition was prevalent among children of the rich in the Southwest under the age of five, adding that research also showed that 13 per cent of children born to rich families also suffer malnutrition.

    Giving an overview of Nutrition Intervention in Nigeria, Dr. Chris Isokpunwu, of the Federal Ministry of Health said there was need to give children balanced diet at infancy before much damage is done.

    Represented by Mrs. Omotayo Ogunbunmi, Isokpunwu noted that “nutrition has a powerful influence on the child’s growth, development and productive life.”

    Quoting statistics from the Nigeria Demographic and Health Survey, Isokpunwu revealed that Nigeria has the highest number of stunted children under the age of five in sub-Sahara Africa and second highest in the world with 37 per cent of all children stunted, 18 per cent wasting and 29 per cent underweight.

    According to him, the infant mortality rate was 69 in every 1,000 live births while only 17 per cent were exclusively breastfed.

    In her presentation, UNICEF Nutrition Specialist, Mrs. Ada Ezeogu, revealed that 50 per cent of infants in Nigeria die as a result of malnutrition, even as she advocated exclusive breastfeeding for children from age zero to six months.

    Refering to the data prepared by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), Mrs. Ezeogu also urged women not to deny babies in the age bracket breast milk on grounds that their breasts would sag.

    She said the infant mortality rate could be reduced through adequate nutrition, adding that exclusive breastfeeding would boost mental capacity of babies and would help Nigerian children to become adults with great intellect in future.

    Mrs. Ezeogu explained that babies did not need water when they were being fed exclusively with breast milk because 80 per cent of breast milk contained water while the remaining 20 per cent contained the needed nutrients for babies’ optimal growth.

    She said: “Every child should be exclusively breast fed for the first six months. Breastfeeding lowers the risk of chronic conditions later in life such as obesity, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, diabetes; childhood asthma and childhood leukaemia.

    “Breastfed infants do better on intelligence and behaviour test than formula-fed babies.”

    At the dialogue, some children who were hitherto malnourished but had overcome the scourge after the intervention of UNICEF field officers in their respective localities were presented.

    Hassan and Hussein are promising twin boys who were deprived of the opportunity of enjoying breastfeeding by the death of their mother.

    Health workers diagnosed them of acute malnutrition in August last year at their Gaa Ayegbade Settlement in Ibarapa East Local Government Area of Oyo State.

    Six months after the children were fed on soya-based enriched complementary food and guide corn; babies who could hardly sit are now walking and eating other foods

    “That they are alive today is a miracle; they did not develop well, they were only feeding on infant formula,” said their grandmother, Hawawu Musa.

    Abigail Babarinde, at the age of one, was unable to sit or walk but respite came her way when she was referred for treatment and her mother commenced feeding her with soya-based enriched complementary food prepared at Oyo State Nutritional Rehabilitation Centre, Oni and Sons Children Hospital.

    Her mother, 21-year-old Aminat Babarinde, told reporters at the forum that she breastfed the baby for one month, claiming that the baby refused to be fed on breast milk.

    She explained that Abigail’s rejection of breast milk affected her growth but she was taken to Eruwa General Hospital where the child was referred to a nutritionist who administered special diet on her.

    The story of Abigail, Hassan and Hussein who looked lively during the forum, was a testimony to efforts of nutrition officers to prevent children from having stunted growth.

    In her presentation, a Nutrition Officer in Oyo State Ministry of Health, Dr. Khadijat Alarape, explained that 13.2 per cent of children in the state are underweight; a percentage which she said was a significant decline from the previous 17.7 per cent few years ago.

  • UNICEF to Osun: address  child malnutrition

    UNICEF to Osun: address child malnutrition

    THE United Nation Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has urged Osun State to address child malnutrition among children under the age of five.
    It enjoined the government to extend its school feeding programme to cover children below three years.
    UNICEF Nutrition Specialist Mrs. Ada Ezeogu, who decried the malnutrition level in the state, revealed that 195, 245 children under five years are stunted in Osun as a result of malnutrition.
    Praising Governor Rauf Aregbesola for the school feeding programme, she advised that the figure generated from National Nutrition and Health Survey 2015 could be reduced, if the early child care centres are included in the programme.
    Mrs. Ezeogu, who was a facilitator at a two-day media parley on child malnutrition with the theme: “Good Nutrition, Invest More” in Ibadan, Oyo State, added that over 50 per cent of infant death occur as a result of malnutrition.
    She urged the government to take proactive steps in addressing the situation.

  • Malnutrition: Senators wives donate to IDPs

    The Senators’ Wives Forum (SWF) has donated foodstuffs and body-care products for infants and children in the various Internally Displaced Persons camps in some parts of the country.

    The forum, represented by Hajia Hadiza Ali Wakili and Mrs. Louis Gyunka from Bauchi South and Nasarawa North Senatorial Districts respectively, and the executive coordinator of the forum, Ms. Inimfon Etuk, made the donation during the launch of the “Get Involved” component of the Future Assured Initiative, organised by the wife of the president, Mrs. Aisha Buhari, in Abuja.

    The ‘Get Involved’ campaign was meant to rally contributions from Nigerians to address heightened incidences of malnutrition in IDPs camps.

    In her remarks, leader of the delegation, Hajia Hadiza Wakili, who spoke on behalf of the forum’s chair and wife of the Senate President, Mrs Toyin Saraki, said: “We are moved by the rising and alarming reports of hunger, starvation and malnutrition of our displaced citizens, especially young infants and children, and hope our contribution will go some way to alleviate the heavy public burden of care for our sisters, brothers and children in these displaced communities, as canvassed by the wife of the president, Federal Republic of Nigeria, Her Excellency, Mrs Aisha Buhari.”

    The Senators’ Wives Forum – established in 1999 – is a friendly society sustained by individual contributions from its members. It comprises spouses of senators in Nigeria’s upper legislative chamber and is currently chaired by Mrs. Toyin Saraki, wife of the president of the Senate.

  • Nigeria risks bigger war over North East malnutrition crisis, Ndume warns

    Nigeria risks bigger war over North East malnutrition crisis, Ndume warns

    Senate Leader Senator Ali Ndume has warned that improper handling of the malnutrition crisis in the North East is capable of causing a larger war than the one being fought against the Boko Haram insurgents.

    The Boko Haram onslaught has displaced millions of Nigerians including women and children, leading to creation of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps mainly in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states.

    Scarcity of consumables and drugs in the region have also led to the death and malnutrition of some of the children.

    A recent United Nations (UN) agencies analysis, including that of the World Food Program showed that more than 4.5 million people are starving and in dire need of food in the area while the number could double within a short period.

    Speaking in Abuja at a cocktail party marking end of official Launch of the Wife of the President, Mrs. Aisha Buhari’s, Get-Involved Initiative aimed at stemming growth of malnutrition in the area, Ndume noted that the crisis in getting worse.

    ” The situation in Borno State particularly in the North East and in the country as liberated generally is very very serious. If we don’t do something concrete now on these children that are growing up malnourished, sick with hunger, poverty and malnutrition in Borno state, then we are going to have another war that is worse than the Boko Haram.

    “So I want you to give the Wife of the President all the support. As estimated, if we don’t do something, for sure more than 50,000 children are going to die of malnutrition.

    “That is beside the people that are dieing right now because of hunger in Borno State,” he added.

    Thanking the Wife of the President for showing concern to the children, he called on mothers everywhere to emulate and try to do what Aisha Buhari is doing.

    “And I want to call on you the Wife of Mr. President to do more because what you have seen coming out of Bawa is a tip of the iceberg of what is happening in Borno state.”

    The Borno State Governor, Kashim Shetima said that the Wife of the President took the challenge of the crisis in the area head on by mobilizing resources to solve the problem.

    He said: “We cannot thank you enough. You deserve special commendation for your giant strides towards assisting the less endowed in our society.

    “She has so far given thirty trucks of assorted commodities to our people. We want to call on other well-to-do Nigerians to come out to give their widows might to her cause.”

    Speaking at the occasion, Mrs. Aisha Buhari said that she felt saddened by the magnitude of malnutrition facing the country.
    Noting that the magnitude of the problem can’t be solved by one stakeholder or group, she said that experts on nutrition have already articulated the current situation, the efforts being made and the future direction.

    “This is the time for all of us to once again renew our intentions and commitments towards ending the problem of malnutrition facing our country,” she said.

    Mrs. Buhari also called on traditional/religious leaders, private sector, civil society and the media to be part of the Get-Involved Initiative.

    The cocktail party was attended by many wives of state governors and cabinet members.

  • ‘Malnutrition responsible  for underage deaths’

    ‘Malnutrition responsible for underage deaths’

    A report by the Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC) has said over 53 per cent of children under five years die of malnutrition in Nigeria, especially in the North.

    Dr. David Olayemi, consultant to CISLAC in Ibadan, said this while presenting a paper: Current situation of food and nutrition in Nigeria, at a Capacity-Building Workshop for Legislative Reporters on Legislative and Policy Advocacy in Agriculture, Nutrition and Health in Nigeria”

    The workshop, which was attended by over 45 journalists in Oyo State, was organised by CISLAC, for civil society groups, media and policy makers on legislative processes and governance, aimed to bridge the gap between legislature and the electorate.

    Olayemi, who was represented by the CISLAC’s Senior Programme Officer (MDGs, Gender, Reproductive Health and Anti-corruption), Ms Chioma Kanu, said to address this trend, government should inaugurate a food and nutrition council.

  • Jigawa tackles malnutrition

    Jigawa tackles malnutrition

    About 32,000 children in Jigawa State are malnourished and may die if nothing is done quickly to save them, a research carried out by United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has indicated.

    The research findings initially caused panic in the state, it was learnt.

    A UNICEF nutrition specialist Philomena Reney said in a paper presented at a workshop that the 32, 000 infants suffer from severe malnutrition and other child-related diseases and may not survive if they did not get urgent medical and nutritional attention.

    According to the research, no fewer than 600,000 children out of 1,100,000 under-five years old in the state are stunted.

    The good thing is that the state government is doing something about the situation, with the collaboration of UNICEF.

    The United Kingdom’s Department for International Development (DFID) is running an interventionist scheme in the state called Child Development Grant Programme (CDGP).

    The programme tackles malnourished expectant mothers and children by providing some cash to selected and screened beneficiaries. Each beneficiary receives N3,500 monthly for the period of 1,000 days from pregnancy. The beneficiaries are mostly in the rural areas of the state where poor nutrition is worse.

    Three local government areas were selected for the pilot scheme, the three councils being Buji, Gagarawa and Guri. Over 22,504 beneficiaries were enrolled.

    One beneficiary in Jaka village in Buji council, Aisha Adamu said the programme transformed her life and that of her eight-month-old baby.

    “This programme has given me a new lease of life,” she said. “The grant has afforded me the ability to get enough and proper nutrition in addition to health education given to us during our monthly lecture. I was taught on exclusive breastfeeding, how to use local materials to prepare and apply correct food to my child; how to take care of my personal hygiene and that of my child. In fact, now I am healthier than ever before, and look at my child, he is very healthy and active, he never suffers from any child killer disease as he received full dosage of child immunisation. You can’t compare him with his elder sister who was born before the coming of this programme to our village.”

    The state Deputy Nutrition Officer Malam Saidu Adamu said that 120 health workers have been trained on community management of acute malnutrition, adding that 43,677 mothers and caregivers have been counseled on recommended standards of feeding infants and young children.

    The officer stated that 787,022 children within the age of 12 to 59 months were dewormed between January and June.

  • Malnutrition in Borno far worse than reported – Health ninister

    The federal government of Nigeria has described the malnutrition crisis in Borno as far worse than what is being reported in the media.

    The representative of the Minister of Health, Prof. Abdusallam Nasidi, who is also the National Coordinator of Centre for Disease Control at a joint press conference with Borno State Government, WHO and other donor partners, also disclosed that not less than 750,000 IDPs require urgent intervention in the next 90 days.

    Prof. Abdulsalam Nasidi hinted that at least five children will die every hour in the state and warned that the impact on the health status of the population will turn out high.

    He said, “The situation here is worsening than what has been reported, so we need to take urgent steps. We need to immediately reach out to 750,000 persons affected (children and adults as well as pregnant women) within the next three months with food, supplements and health interventions.”

    He added that the situation will be worse with the continued military operations, as some people are still trapped in certain communities.

    “It was agreed that the figures reported by the emergency team on group could be representing just a tip of iceberg. Thus, to prevent further disaster and mitigate the impact of dire situation, a long-term multi-sectoral collaboration, integrated approach and coordinated response is required,” Prof. Adulsalami noted.

    In his remarks, the Borno State Commissioner of Health, Dr. Haruna Mshellia, disclosed that the situation will linger for months before the victims recover.

    He commended the efforts of the National Emergency Management Agency, NEMA, for the recent donation of nutrition supplements to the affected children across 22 satellite camps in the state including  Dikwa,  Munguno, Bama Kukawa, Mafa Gwoza.

    The Nation had reported that Borno State government had earlier evacuated over one thousand children suffering from malnutrition from Bama where they are been treated in a Special care Area in Maiduguri.

  • Malnutrition: Nigeria’s silent crisis

    Malnutrition: Nigeria’s silent crisis

    Severe acute malnutrition

    Invisible yet deadly, malnutrition is decimating the country  daily. According to the Federal Ministry of Health, each day, Nigeria loses about 2300 under-five-year- olds and 145 women of child-bearing age. This makes the country the second largest contributor to the under–five and maternal mortality rate in the world. Mother and child suffer from a triple burden of malnutrition- over nutrition, under nutrition, and micronutrient deficiency. This long-neglected problem does not stop there. Undernourished girls grow into undernourished mothers who give birth to undernourished children. A vicious cycle thus holds back generation after generation.

    Malnutrition is a pathological condition brought about by inadequacy of one or more of the nutrients essential for survival, growth, development, reproduction and capacity to learn and function in the society.

    Overview of nutrition

    According to Head of Nutrition, Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH), Dr. Chris Osa. Isokpunwu, there are just four states that have low burden for nutrition interventions – Abia, Ekiti, Ogun and Lagos. Twelve states that have medium burden are Kogi, Kwara, Oyo, Osun, Ondo, Edo, Enugu, Anambra, Imo, Cross River, Rivers, and Akwa Ibom. Included here is the Federal Capital territory (FCT). The remaining states are of high burden. These are priority states for nutrition interventions – Ebonyi, Delta and Bayelsa and the North. Borno is worst hit.

    In the affected states, the FMOH recorded stunting to be 37 percent. When a child is stunted, its body and brain do not grow or developed properly. Wasting is 18 per cent. When a child is wasting, its age is not commensurate with its height and weight. Permanent damage that is irreversible is recorded. Underweight is 29 per cent while exclusive breastfeeding is at 17 per cent. Severe acute malnutrition, or severe wasting, occurs when a child’s weight drops to such a low level they are at risk of dying. Nigeria’s rates of severe wasting are among the highest in the world at 1.9 million children each year. UNICEF said up to 10 percent will die without treatment.

    Severe acute malnutrition (SAM, which is very dangerous) is real in Nigeria. An estimated 244,000 children under five will suffer from SAM in Borno State this year. UNICEF says treatment is simple and effective and children can get better. But if the country is not able to treat the other children suffering from SAM in such areas, one in five of those untreated children are likely to die.

    The Ministry of Health identified the drivers of Malnutrition burden thus: Immediate drivers (Inadequate food intake; Lack of dietary diversity, Infectious diseases), Underlying drivers (Food insecurity, inadequate child and maternal care; poor access to health services; unhealthy environment), Basic drivers (Poverty; Population; failure in governance; gender inequality) and other factors (Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs); Epidemics e.g. Cholera, Ebola; Natural disasters).

     

    The first 1,000 days

    There are many proven interventions to break a seemingly intractable legacy. Investing in children’s nutrition has the power to trigger big social and economic changes. Children with well-developed brains and bodies have better life chances: they live longer and healthier lives, they do better in school, and they grow into more productive adults. The right nutrients and care at the right time in the first 1,000 days from conception and through the early years of a child’s life unlocks their potential.

    UNICEF believes that tackling under nutrition is urgent, feasible and affordable. Ignoring under nutrition is wrecking children’s lives. It is the underlying cause of 45 per cent of child deaths. Every year, that’s around 2.7 million deaths of children under the age of five.

     

    Solution

    In January 2008 The Lancet—one of the world’s most highly respected medical journals, demonstrated the availability of 13 proven nutrition interventions that could address the problems of malnutrition and save millions of lives. The set of interventions focused on the “window of opportunity” from minus nine to 24 months (i.e. from pregnancy to two years old) for high impact in reducing death and disease and avoiding irreversible harm.

    All children diagnosed with severe wasting attend regular clinics and the mothers receive advice on home care and treatments, including packets of Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Food, which can help them recover quickly.

     

    Food for malnourished children

    The estimated 2300 children who are underweight and suffering from stunted growth because their bodies do not have enough nutrients should be helped. This is because hunger kills more people, especially children in the country than HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria combined. Malnutrition is a complex disease and children are the most vulnerable.

    According to experts in nutrition and child care nutrition, programmes in some of the world’s most food-stressed areas can recover with adequate nutrition intervention.

    According to UNICEF’s Nutrition Officer, Aminu Usman, giving a ready to use therapeutic food (RUTF) to children can significantly reverse any acute malnourished child. RUTF is high energy, high protein with 500Kcal calories. It is very effective for treating child malnutrition. A steady supply of RUTF for eight weeks will stabilise any child and make same well again. It is supplied by Children Investment Fund Foundation (CIFF) to the camps through UNICEF.

    A visit to Sharada Centre for Treatment of Acute malnutrition, Kano revealed this is true.

    According to the Outpatient Therapeutic feeding Programme (OTP) Officer, Halima Musa Yakasa “Thankfully, it is a disease that we can both prevent and treat. Our nutrition programmes have a 90-percent success rate, meaning that almost all the malnourished children who come through our programs recover. We also tackle malnutrition by educating mothers and caretakers on family nutrition, breastfeeding, and other good feeding practices and supporting families, communities, and Ministries of Health to treat malnourished children at home using therapeutic foods like groundnut, soy and ’nut. We receive ready to use Therapeutic Food.

    She said UNICEF also supports infant and young child feeding to eliminate malnutrition through the centre. “The infant and young child intervention in the community provides, caregivers or and pregnant and breastfeeding women with knowledge and skills required for appropriate infant and young child feeding. Malnutrition kills 1219 children under-five years every day in Nigeria. It also leads to stunting, wasting or and poor brain development. UNICEF supports government to address child malnutrition. Some children just started treatment here at the Sharada Centre for Treatment of Aacute malnutrition in Kano. The treatment works,” she stated.

    “Malnutrition kills 1219 children under five years every day in Nigeria. It also leads to stunting, wasting or and poor brain development. UNICEF supports government to address child malnutrition. Here at Sharada centre for treatment of acute malnutrition, Kano, the treatment works. We did not record any death in the last five years.”

    In 2011, the Federal Government signed the Scaling-up Nutrition (SUN) movement agreement and  the Global Nutrition for Growth Compact in 2013. In doing so, it committed itself to tackling its high rates of child malnutrition. Action requires significant political commitment, government funding, effective coordination and planning at all levels and sectors, as well as civil society (CSO) and community engagement.

    The cost of treatment Community-based Management of Acute Malnutrition (CMAM) is just N4, 800 (US$160) for each child, including N2, 200 (US$76) for the RUTF; the remaining N25, 000 (US$84) covers all other costs, including staff time and training, transport and storage of supplies, and basic medicines. UNICEF and the Federal Government are scaling up the CMAM response and UNICEF is advocating increased investment in CMAM from both the Government of Nigeria and external donors.

    CMAM was piloted in Gombe and Kebbi states in 2009 and has  been introduced in 11 states in the North where malnutrition poses the greatest threat. CMAM treats acutely malnourished children from six months to five years old on an out-patient basis. More than 830,000 children have been cured in the programme with the cure rate rising steadily – standing at 85 per cent. Of the remaining, about two per cent do not respond to treatment and are referred to hospitals; the current mortality rate is just one per cent, while the other children have defaulted from the programme.

    “We must scale-up CMAM in Nigeria. It is a proven high-impact intervention that is saving lives and helping Nigerian children reach their full potential through a good start in life,” noted UNICEF Nigeria Representative Jean Gough. “We need greater investment in Nigeria’s future by investment in good nutrition,” she added.

  • FG declares nutritional emergency in Borno

    FG declares nutritional emergency in Borno

    The Federal Government has declared nutritional emergency in Borno state to save lives.

    It was reported that about 80 children die daily as a result of malnutrition.

    Minister of Health Prof. Isaac Adewole announced the declaration Monday morning at the inaugural Board meeting of the Governing Board of the ECOWAS Regional Centre for Disease Control in Abuja.

    He also directed the country’s coordinator, Centre for Disease Control, Prof. Abdulsalam Nasidi to dispatch a team to Borno state to help tackle the situation.

  • Severe malnutrition: 32,000 on death row in Jigawa, says UNICEF

    The United Nation Children Education Fund (UNICEF) has warned 32, 000 infants may die in Jigawa State from severe malnutrition and other child-related diseases.

    Its nutrition specialist Philomena Irene stated this in Dutse in a paper presented in a one-day workshop on manpower development institute.

    Irene said the discovery is contained in a survey carried out by the agency under “ORIE Dissemination of research”.

    She said “a serious and urgent action must be in place to curtail the disaster.”

    According to the research, 600,000 children of the 1,100,000 under five years old in the state were stunted, which is equal to more than the national average.

    She stressed that at least 165,000 children of six to 59 months old are severely malnourished and nine times likely to die without treatment.

    Irene explained that as part of the WINNN project sustainability strategy, ORIE was engaged by DFID to conduct operational research that will contribute to greater and wider awareness for nutrition.

    She assured that the Fund will continue to create a platform to disseminate the research finding for other states.