Three times more children treated for severe acute malnutrition in Bangui hospital than this time last year

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2014-04-26

The number of children being treated for severe acute malnutrition in Bangui’s largest in-patient centre during the first quarter of 2014 has tripled compared to last year, UNICEF said.

Officials predict the numbers of malnourished children will rise steeply in the coming months in Central African Republic, where the majority of families have been unable to plant their crops or earn their living, and where there is poor access to safe water, sanitation and health care.

“Here in CAR, more children will die from malnutrition and related diseases than from bullets,” said UNICEF R. “Malnutrition is even more deadly in the rainy season, when diarrhea and malaria are at their peak. Both diseases put the lives of already malnourished children at risk.”

From January to March this year, nearly 680 children were treated for severe acute malnutrition with medical complications at Bangui Pediatric Hospital, compared to 214 children in the same period last year. The hospital is the largest in-patient nutrition treatment center in the country, and two additional tents have already been erected by UNICEF partner Action Against Hunger to accommodate the overflow of malnourished children.

Partners working on nutrition in Central African Republic estimate that 28,000 children will suffer from severe acute malnutrition this year in the country – threatening children’s lives and their future health. So far this year, UNICEF and partners have treated more than 6,800 children for severe acute malnutrition nation-wide thanks to a scale-up of the nutrition response in Central African Republic.

UNICEF and partners are supporting 27 in-patient and 127 out-patient centres for severely malnourished children throughout Central African Republic. This is a large increase compared to 2013.

Since the beginning of the crisis, UNICEF has been the main provider of nutritional supplies such as therapeutic milk and ready-to-use therapeutic food used in the treatment of severe acute malnutrition. So far this year, UNICEF has supplied more than 4,200 cartons of therapeutic food and therapeutic milk. This month, UNICEF will distribute another 2,600 cartons of therapeutic food throughout the country – which can treat up to 3,000 children.

UNICEF needs $11 million this year to fund therapeutic and preventive nutrition programs for children in Central African Republic. Only $3.8 million of this figure has been raised.

Source: United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund