Press Release - Rome/Geneva, 2 June 2008 Simply expanding existing interventions, which were already not able to address the ongoing malnutrition crisis, will certainly not protect the young children who are most vulnerable to rising food prices. Rapidly growing children have specific nutritional needs and small stomachs. They require food dense in energy and diverse in nutrients, which is best achieved by providing them animal-source foods such as dairy, eggs, meat or fish. Quality of food is as important as quantity and therefore policy makers must ensure nutrition security and not only food security. Soaring food prices will exacerbate malnutrition, with families not able to afford food nutritious enough for young children to grow, and to both avoid and overcome disease. For regions with long-standing malnutrition problems, conventional food aid does not include specific foods for young children. Milk powder was removed from relief food targeted at children in the late 1980s when milk surpluses subsided. Since then, children have been receiving fortified blended flours that contain no animal-source food – a diet which paediatricians do not recommend for children under two. Economic considerations have led to product, which is sub-optimal. “We need leaders to open their eyes to the needs of young children who are most vulnerable right now, and for whom more of the same could put them at risk,” said Dr. Susan Shepherd, nutrition advisor at MSF. “One critical question this week is: will donors change the rules so that appropriate food for young children is added to food aid and nutrition programmes?” The World Health Organization estimates there are 178 million children that are malnourished across the globe, and at any given moment, 20 million suffering from the most severe form of malnutrition. Malnutrition contributes to between 3.5 and 5 million deaths in children under five annually. According to MSF estimates only 3% of the 20 million children suffering from severe acute malnutrition receive the UN-recommended treatment they need. MSF has treated over 150,000 children in 2006 and 2007 in 22 countries with therapeutic and supplemental food. For more information, contact Sally McMillan on 02 8570 2611 or 0447 482 379
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