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Zimbabwe:
Survey records alarming levels of child malnutrition
IRIN
News
April 12,
2005
http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/ACIO-6BDMD9?OpenDocument&rc=1&cc=zwe
JOHANNESBURG - A survey
in 10 districts across Zimbabwe has recorded alarmingly high levels of
malnutrition among children.
Interviews conducted
by the country's Food and Nutrition Council, in collaboration with the
Ministry of Health and Child Welfare, showed stunting or chronic malnutrition
levels as high as 47 percent among children aged from six months to 59
months on commercial farms.
High rates of wasting
or acute malnutrition, ranging between 5.5 percent and 6.7 percent, were
noted in the southern provinces of Matabeleland triple the "acceptable"
level of two percent, according to the council.
The high malnutrition
levels coincided with high prices for the staple food, maize.
All three nutrition
indicators wasting, stunting and being underweight were worse among orphans.
"Orphans are three
times more likely to be wasted/thin, two times more likely to be stunted
and 1.5 times more likely to be underweight than non-orphans," the survey
found. The council called for assistance to orphans and vulnerable children
to be scaled up.
The UN Children's
Fund (UNICEF), which funded part of the survey, said the findings highlighted
the need for strengthened funding for ongoing food and supplement interventions.
"The survey supports
what UNICEF has said for some time, and it has [made a case for] what
we have been working towards that is, critical support to the country's
nutrition and health services," said James Elder, UNICEF's spokesman in
Zimbabwe.
"There is an enormous
need for children in this country; a need that UNICEF and partners are
ready to respond to on a large scale ... for this to happen, a boost in
funds is desperately required," Elder said.
"With elections now
behind us, we are hoping that the issue of people will override that of
politics ... until that happens, life will remain very difficult for Zimbabwean
children," he told IRIN.
Among its recommendations
the report called for an extension of the surveillance system to all districts
in Zimbabwe; an investigation into the poor coverage by vitamin A supplementation
programmes; and the inclusion of an HIV indicator in the system.
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