US leads new pledges to fight child malnutrition

US leads new pledges to fight child malnutrition

Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development Samantha Power, speaking in Sri Lanka on September 11, 2022, has promised new funding to support emergency therapeutic meals for children
Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development Samantha Power, speaking in Sri Lanka on September 11, 2022, has promised new funding to support emergency therapeutic meals for children. Photo: Ishara S. KODIKARA / AFP/File
Source: AFP

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The United States on Wednesday led pledges for $280 million to fight childhood malnutrition through the supply of ready-to-eat packets in nations suffering from acute food shortages.

At an event on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, the US Agency for International Development promised $200 million of the total $280 million as part of an event with UNICEF to stop childhood wasting, the low weight-for-height caused by poor nutrition.

"The truth is, wasting is treatable," USAID chief Samantha Power said.

"Complex cases require more specialized medical attention, but for straightforward cases caught early, treatment is cost-effective and can be done at home," she said.

"Yet only a third of children suffering from wasting today receive the treatment they need. And with more funding, better delivery systems and improved access to health care, we can empower communities to save their children's lives."

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So-called ready-to-use therapeutic foods are pastes of high nutritional value that are given to children who suffer severe wasting.

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Invented by French researcher Andre Briend, they can be consumed directly and have long shelf lives.

Power said that a full course of the therapeutic packets takes several weeks and requires monitoring by a health worker, with the treatment costing a little more than $100 per child.

The event, also organized with non-governmental organizations and Senegal, came hours after US President Joe Biden promised $2.9 billion in new funding to fight global food insecurity.

Food shortages have been worsened by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, a major grain exporter, with Somalia threatened by famine following successive failed rainy seasons.

Source: AFP

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