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ZIMBABWE:
Kwashiorkor on the increase
IRIN News
July 19, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=42255
HARARE - Further evidence
of urban vulnerability in Zimbabwe has emerged with the release of a report
indicating that the capital, Harare, has seen an increase in the number
of kwashiorkor cases.
In his health report for 2003, the city's director of health services,
Dr Lovemore Mbengeranwa, noted that instances of diagnosed kwashiorkor
had risen by 11.1 percent. A total of 621 cases were treated at council-run
clinics, of which 97 percent were children under the age of five.
The symptoms of kwashiorkor, a nutritional disease caused by inadequate
protein consumption, include a bloated stomach and spindly arms and legs,
and can result in death if not treated.
"Food vulnerability in urban areas is increasing at an alarming level
due to economic instability in the country," Mbengeranwa told IRIN.
Once patients have been diagnosed they are treated and rehabilitated,
while affected children are added to a supplementary feeding scheme run
in urban areas.
Supplementary feeding scheme
"Supplementary feeding interventions have, in the past, been targeted
at rural populations, as they were viewed as the most food-insecure and
vulnerable. However, it has been found that the level of food vulnerability
in urban areas of Zimbabwe is increasing at an alarming rate," Mbengeranwa
remarked.
Rising unemployment, a declining economy, poor harvests and the scarcity
of some basic commodities have been blamed for the poor nutritional status
of children. Inflation has also eroded the purchasing power of households
in urban areas.
Mbengeranwa said a 2003 assessment of the nutritional status of children
under six years had established that, in some instances, children in Harare
were worse off than their rural counterparts.
This had led to the establishment of a feeding scheme in partnership with
the NGO, Help From Germany.
The malnutrition affecting children was also affecting their parents,
Mbengeranwa told IRIN. "Preliminary results of an urban vulnerability
survey have demonstrated that in Harare most high-density areas had food-vulnerable
people. The extent of vulnerability is worse in informal settlements like
squatter camps."
Most families in Harare had adopted mechanisms to cope with their limited
access to food, said Mbengeranwa. These mechanisms included reducing food
quantities, combining meals and removing meat from their diets.
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