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Médecins Sans Frontières expands nutritional programs in Southern regions of Ethiopia

Ethiopia / 05.06.08

“Life is a daily struggle but for many people this year that struggle became too much to bear”

Jalalo is worried. His wife has brought their one year old twins to the Médecins Sans Frontières stabilisation centre in Shashemene, in the Oromiya region of southern Ethiopia, to be treated for malnutrition, but his ten other children are at home with no food. “I used to work on the farms, guarding the food,” he explains, “but there’s been no rain this year so there’s very little work. Some days we eat, but mostly we go to sleep with no food.”

And Jalalo is not alone. Since Médecins Sans Frontières started its intervention in the Oromiya region on 13 May, over 700 children with complicated severe malnutrition have been admitted to its three stabilisation centres in Shashemene, Ropi and Senbete Shinquille. More than 1,500 who are not suffering from complications, such as severe dehydration or malaria, are being treated on an outpatient basis in eight different clinics around the region.

In a country where around seven million people routinely rely on food aid, malnutrition is nothing new. However this year a number of different factors have made the situation much worse than normal. “In Oromiya most of our patients tell us that they have no food because the early rains did not come this year,” explains Médecins Sans Frontières’s Head of Mission Francois Calas, “but other factors such as high rates of inflation and an increase in food prices have also played a part. For most people here life is a daily struggle and for many of them this year that struggle became too much to bear.”

© Elena Torta /MSF
In May 2008 MSF started a nutrition intervention in the Oromiya region, Ethiopia, following assessments that showed alarming levels of malnutrition among children.

Whatever the reasons, the levels of malnutrition that Médecins Sans Frontières teams are seeing are alarming. When launching nutritional interventions, rapid assessments are done to get an idea of the seriousness of the situation. An emergency nutritional project will generally be started if a rate of 3% severe acute malnutrition is found. In some areas of the Southern Nations and Nationalities People’s Region (SNNPR), recent assessments revealed a rate of 11%. As a result, Médecins Sans Frontières has set up a stabilisation centre in Kambata, one of the most densely populated parts of the region.

As an emergency medical organisation, Médecins Sans Frontières is focusing on treating the most severely malnourished. But the impact of treating people will be limited unless more general preventive measures are taken. As Calas explains: “Sometimes we have to turn people away because they’re not malnourished or sick enough yet. It’s hard because we know they have no food at home and it may just be a matter of time before we see them again. We give therapeutic food and family rations to the patients that we discharge, but unless there’s a huge increase in general food distributions I imagine that we’ll continue to see malnourished children for some months to come.”

© Elena Torta/MSF
MSF staff assessing a young patient for malnutrition in the Oromiya region of Ethiopia.

Médecins Sans Frontières’s nutritional intervention in Ethiopian Oromiya region Médecins Sans Frontières has set up three stabilisation centres in Shashemene (Shashemene district), Ropi and Senbete Shinquille (Siraro district).

Médecins Sans Frontières is also running eight outpatient therapeutic programs (OTPs) in the region in: Shashemene; Fajigole; Toga; Shalla; Alem Geboya; Ropi; Senbete Shinquille and Alem Tena. Another stabilisation centre and OTP have recently opened in Kambata (SNNPR region).

In the coming days Médecins Sans Frontières plans to increase its activities by setting up a stabilisation centre and two more OTPs in Shalla, three more OTPs in Siraro district and another seven OTPs in Kambata (SNNPR region).


Médecins Sans Frontières has been working in Ethiopia since 1984.

  

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