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Southern
Africa: More children going hungry
IRIN News
May 05, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=53180
Johannesburg-
According to a report released this week by Unicef, the UN children's
agency, HIV/AIDS is contributing to continuing high rates of malnutrition
among children in Southern African countries.
Rather than
making progress towards the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of
reducing hunger by half, the study, 'Progress for Children: a Report
Card on Nutrition', found that the number of underweight children
in the region has actually increased over the past 15 years.
Researchers
attributed the slowing or reversing of positive trends in combating
child malnutrition in the early 1990s to the impact of HIV/AIDS
combined with drought-related food crises.
The proportion
of underweight children in Lesotho and Zimbabwe, for example, was
higher in 2004 than in 1990, while in Malawi, Mozambique and Zambia
one out of every five children is now underweight.
Despite having
the second highest adult HIV prevalence rate in the world, Botswana
is the only country in the region on track for reaching the MDG
target. Swaziland, with the highest HIV prevalence, has also managed
to reduce the proportion of underweight children to 10 percent,
the lowest in the region.
However, the
report noted that these results could have been skewed by increased
child mortality in the two countries as a result of malnutrition
combined with HIV.
South Africa,
the wealthiest country in the region, has seen its proportion of
underweight children rise by an average of 5.6 percent a year since
1994/95. The country also has the region's lowest prevalence of
exclusive breastfeeding, a highly beneficial practice in the first
six months of life.
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