CHILD
MALNUTRITION
Every day 15,000 children die
from severe acute malnutrition
Please will you help?
Every day 15,000 children die
from severe acute malnutrition
Please will you help?
The world is currently facing an unprecedented hunger crisis fuelled by war. And those paying the highest price are the poorest and most vulnerable.
Today children in Syria, Yemen, Afghanistan and Sudan are battling for survival. Every day they face starvation and disease. Their challenges are unimaginable and only exacerbated by the conflict surrounding them.
Living in countries paralysed by war, they cannot access the food and medicines they desperately need to survive.
Right now, 40 million children are at risk of dying from hunger. Unless they receive immediate treatment like emergency food and therapeutic milk they will die.
Habiba Saad, a 16-month-old Habiba Saad receives treatment for severe malnutrition in Aden Governorate, Yemen.
35-year-old Salamah Abdu, the mother, says. “My daughter suffers from malnutrition because my husband does not have a fixed job, as he works in the sea and his job is seasonal.”
Dr Aida Hussein Seddiq, the consultant paediatrician at Al-Sadaqah Hospital in Aden Governorate, reports on the development of Habiba Saad, a 16-month-old who suffers from severe malnutrition.
Dr Aida says, “The condition of the girl was completely unstable when she was referred to us.” She adds, “Habiba was provided oral rehydration therapy and antibiotics, in addition to therapeutic feeding treatment that is milk. This was the first stage, which took time. However, we expect her to gain more weight because we prescribed her milk with more calories.”
Children with severe acute malnutrition have weakened immune systems and are at higher risk of dying from common childhood diseases. They are 12 times more likely to die than a well-nourished child.
But a miracle food costing just a few cents can save lives – even in the midst of a war. RUTF is an energy-dense, micronutrient paste. It has saved millions of children’s lives.
Parents can give it to their children at home or wherever they are staying. It requires no preparation and does not need to be mixed with water, meaning it is safe from contamination
For every child like Chinhial, there are more children who still need help. Please will you help them now?
You can send your donation by post to
Freepost; UNICEF Ireland, 33 Lower Ormond Quay, Dublin D01 R283.
In the unlikely event that the funds raised exceed UNICEF’s funding requirements for this appeal, your donation will be directed to where the need is greatest.