At least 990 children between the ages of one and five years are suffering from severe cases of malnutrition at an internally displaced persons (IDPs) camp in Muna, Borno state.
Being an unofficial IDP camp, Muna offers little comfort to the refugees who are mainly from Mafa, Dikwa and Gamboru Ngala.
The IDPs there lack access to food supply and other provisions from the non-governmental 0rganisation (NGO) and United Nations’ agencies in the region.
A United Nations Children Emergency Funds (UNICEF) official who spoke off the record told TheCable that nearly 1000 children in the camp are “severely” malnourished, and risk losing their lives.
She said the children had been enrolled into the Community for the Management of Acute Malnutrition (CMAM) programme of UNICEF.
“In May, we recorded about 170 new severe cases of malnutrition and the number keeps increasing day-by-day,” she said.
“Some that we administered had mild symptoms, some children have moderate while very few among them were not malnourished.”
She attributed the large number of malnutrition to lack of access to highly nutritious foods in the camp, poor feeding practices, such as inadequate breastfeeding by their mothers as well as offering of the wrong foods.
“Most of the cases you are seeing are new arrivals as you are aware that some IDPs were newly rescued from Mafa where they were held hostage by Boko Haram terrorists. Last months, we recorded about 97 new cases,” she said.
“Most times we give them The Ready to Use Theraphautic Food (RUTF), and 250 miligram Amoxiciline. And when relapsed, we normally give them Albandazole and Vitamin C.”
Zainab Ba’ana, an IDP from Mafa, whose son, Abubakar, was suffering from malnutrition, said she eats only once in a day at Muna camp, thereby lacking necessary breast milk to feed her child.
Culled from TheCable
Wednesday, 7 June 2017
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