Nepal Earthquakes: One month on from first quake
Nepal Earthquakes: One month on from first quake, malnutrition a growing threat for children - UNICEF
A new video featuring heartbreaking interviews with children whose schools and homes have been destroyed is available here: http://uni.cf/nepaledu
A new animation on the crisis for children in Nepal is available here: http://uni.cf/nepal1mth
http://uni.cf/1HH6SbO
One month after the first of two major earthquakes hit Nepal, an estimated 70,000 children under five need urgent nutrition support so as to prevent a deterioration of children’s nutrition status - according to UNICEF.
Around 15,000 children in 14 of the worst-hit districts will require therapeutic foods – like nutrient-rich ready-to-use peanut paste – for the treatment of severe acute malnutrition. Additionally, some 55,000 children with moderate acute malnutrition will require supplementary feeding and care to bring them back to healthy growth and development.
“Before the earthquake, more than one in ten children across Nepal were already suffering from acute malnutrition while close to four in ten had stunted growth due to chronic undernutrition,” says Tomoo Hozumi, UNICEF’s Representative in Nepal. “Now we have serious concerns that the situation could deteriorate in the wake of this disaster, and would undo the gains in nutrition that this country has achieved in the past few years.”
“We are working double speed with our partners to provide urgent feeding and care to protect the lives of these children and to build their resistance against diseases, especially water borne diseases, during the upcoming monsoon season.”
UNICEF is working with national and international partners and the government of Nepal to deliver a comprehensive nutrition response that includes:
• Protecting and promoting breastfeeding for
children under two years of age – a lifesaving
intervention - and discouraging the use of bottle
feeding.
•
• Providing essential micronutrient
supplements for more than 120,000 children and counseling
mothers and families on how to feed young children with
family foods.
•
• Supporting community screening
to identify children with severe acute malnutrition in
affected districts.
•
• Delivering specialized
ready-to-use therapeutic foods to treat over 3,000 children
with severe acute malnutrition in their
communities.
•
• Working through Radio Nepal and
111 local and private radio stations to deliver life-saving
information on maternal and child nutrition to 380,000
families.
•
• Launching a week-long campaign by
mid-June, before the monsoon rains, to provide a package of
six essential nutrition interventions - including vitamin A
supplements and deworming prophylaxis - to over350,000
children.
•
Across nearly two dozen districts
affected by the earthquake 1.7 million children remain in
urgent need of humanitarian aid – with the risk of
long-term physical and emotional conditions
climbing.
“We are already seeing a growth in chronic conditions – such as children with acute respiratory infections provoked by the dust from the debris in the towns and villages,” says Tomoo Hozumi
“Children will also be living with long term disabilities as a result of injuries sustained in the earthquake, as well as anxiety problems.”
Over the past month, UNICEF has mobilized a substantial aid response to help children in urgent need, including:
• provided clean water to over 305,109 people
and adequate sanitation and hand washing facilities to
over 45,201 people
•
• 10,000 children in
displaced communities accessing Child Friendly
Spaces
•
• Nearly 9,000 children and more than
2,000 parents have been provided with Psychosocial First
Aid
•
• Over 3,000 children aged 6-59 months have
been vaccinated against measles and rubella in an ongoing
campaign in the most affected districts
“A lot has been done, but much more needs to be done urgently,” says Mr. Hozumi. “The road to recovery for Nepal may be long and challenging one, but UNICEF will be there, however long it takes to help Nepal’s children bounce back to a better and brighter future.”
“We need all the support we can get, as the support we give now will have long-term consequences that will impact generations to come.”
UNICEF has launched a new animation to raise awareness of the ongoing crisis facing children in Nepal:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aD7P5CmP3xM&feature=youtu.be
Please donate at unicef.org.nz/nepal
ENDS