Archive for the ‘Campaign’ Category

Rewriting the Story

Sunday, October 16th, 2011

Thank you for helping to rewrite the story of malnutrition for 195 million children around the world. As one of the more than 138,000 people in 180 countries who signed the petition demanding that donor nations stop supplying nutritionally substandard food to malnourished children and children at risk of malnutrition in developing countries, you have already helped make a significant difference.

Today, on World Food Day, you can continue to help rewrite the story by donating your profile for 24 hours.

Press Release: Food Aid System Continues to Fail Malnourished Children

Thursday, October 13th, 2011

While Young Victims of War and Famine Are Able to Access Latest Lifesaving, Nutritious Foods, Millions More Malnourished Children Still Receive Poor Quality Food Aid

Childhood Malnutrition – What’s Happening Now
Download Briefing Paper (PDF)

NEW YORK, OCTOBER 13, 2011 – Despite some recent gains in the fight against childhood malnutrition, the global food aid system—led by the United States—largely continues to provide substandard foods to millions of malnourished children every year, the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) announced today, in advance of World Food Day on October 16.

Malnutrition—a preventable and treatable condition—afflicts an estimated 195 million children worldwide and is the underlying cause of at least one-third of the eight million annual deaths of children under five years of age, the vast majority of which occur in the developing world.

Children under the age of two are the most vulnerable to the consequences of malnutrition, and without access to nutrient-dense foods necessary for growth and development, such as highly effective ready-to-use supplementary foods now available, they will suffer debilitating lifelong consequences.

“It’s been proven beyond any doubt that getting nutritionally appropriate foods to young, vulnerable children saves their lives, yet the global food aid system has not fully caught up with the revolutionary gains made in nutrition science,” said Dr. Unni Karunakara, MSF’s international president.

The bulk of international food aid shipments, including those sent to countries with a high burden of malnutrition, such as parts of sub-Saharan Africa, are comprised of corn-soy blend (CSB) fortified flours, which do not include the vital nutrients and proteins growing children require. The United States alone annually ships approximately 130,000 metric tons of sub-standard CSB—grown and processed on American farms—to the developing world.

While initiatives led by the US government, such as the “1,000 days” campaign or “Scaling Up Nutrition” (SUN), bring together countries featuring high levels of malnutrition with major international food donors—demonstrating that there is a scientific and political consensus on the need to focus on children under two—most food aid today does not provide appropriate nutrition to young children.

“The catalog of products available for food aid grossly neglects the needs of the most vulnerable,” said Dr. Karunakara. “There’s no excuse for waiting anymore; the world’s major food aid donor countries need to finally get on board.”

MSF today sent letters to representatives of the top food aid donor countries, including the US, European Union member states, Canada, and Brazil. The letters were sent on behalf of more than 133,000 individuals from over 180 countries who signed a petition, demanding that donor nations “stop supplying nutritionally substandard food to malnourished children and children at risk of malnutrition in developing countries.”

In a letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah, and Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack, MSF-USA Executive Director Sophie Delaunay urged the US government to apply the same nutrition standards to the food it sends overseas as it does through the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC), which ensures that low-income American families have access to quality, nutritious foods.

“As the world’s largest food aid donor, the policies and practices of the U.S. are enormously influential in assuring that the right foods reach the right people at the right time,” the letter said.

Some key food aid players have begun to change. The World Food Program, for example, now uses supplementary foods that meet the nutritional needs of children under two as the cornerstone of its interventions in medical emergencies. Such products played a key role in 2010 in response to the nutritional crisis that struck Niger, the floods in Pakistan, and the earthquake in Haiti. And donor nations and aid agencies have improved the quality of foods sent to Somalia and Kenya in response to current nutrition crises there.

Yet the vast majority of malnourished children, who are not caught up in attention-grabbing emergencies, continue to receive products from major international food aid donors that do not meet their specific nutritional needs.

“High profile emergencies, such as those in Somalia and Kenya today, represent just the tip of the malnutrition iceberg,” said Dr. Karunakara. “Most malnourished children are invisible, and they should not have to become victims of war or natural catastrophes in order to have access to the foods they need.”

In late 2008, an expert meeting convened by the World Health Organization (WHO) considered the growing body of scientific evidence and concluded that nutritional standards of food aid needed to be improved. But three years later, the WHO, which most Ministries of Health in developing countries rely on for policy guidance, has yet to issue formal guidelines to ensure the improvement of food for malnourished or young children.

“Guidance from the WHO is crucial to encourage donor countries to adopt better standards for food aid and recipient countries to adopt better measures to ensure their children have access to quality nutrition,” said Dr. Karunakara.

“Children cannot afford the delays caused by having to demonstrate the safety and efficacy of these new specialized foods with every single government from one crisis to the next,” he said. “This only serves to delay the initiation of lifesaving programs.”

In June 2010, MSF and the VII Photo agency launched “Starved for Attention,” a multimedia campaign exposing the neglected and largely invisible crisis of childhood malnutrition. VII photojournalists traveled to malnutrition “hotspots” around the world—from war zones to emerging economies—to shed light on the underlying causes of the malnutrition crisis and innovative approaches to combat this condition, producing eight documentaries, which can be viewed at www.starvedforattention.org.

In 2010, MSF admitted more than 300,000 malnourished patients to feeding centers at 139 projects in 28 countries.

MSF Fights the Nutritional Double Standard at Food Aid Policy Conference

Friday, August 26th, 2011
Reactions from the MSF aid workers and staff who participated in the Kansas City meetings:

Last month, policymakers and representatives from various organizations involved in the international food aid system gathered in Kansas City, Missouri to assess current U.S. food aid policy

Several MSF aid workers and staff, including a pediatrician and a nutritionist who both recently treated malnourished children in MSF field clinics, attended the conference to give voice to the Starved for Attention campaign and promote the improvement of food aid quality.  As Dr. Susan Shepherd recently wrote in an opinion piece in the Kansas City Star,  “Investments in child health and nutrition programs should be based on what children need, no matter where they live.”

While some incremental progress was achieved with the release of a report by Tufts University experts calling for higher levels of key nutrients in corn-soy blend, a food aid staple, the MSF team reports that quicker and more significant changes are still needed to treat the millions of malnourished children around the world.

Dr Susan Shepherd Responds to Nick Kristof’s Editorial, ‘The Breast Milk Cure’

Wednesday, July 6th, 2011

Breast-Feeding in Niger

To the Editor:

Forgive my skepticism at Nicholas D. Kristof’s pronouncement that breast-feeding is the cheap miracle cure for malnutrition and child mortality in Niger (“The Breast Milk Cure,” column, June 23).

Exclusive breast-feeding during a child’s first six months of life is not cheap anywhere. Decisions must be made by women about how to allocate time to earn money to feed the family, tend the fields or nurse a new baby.

As a pediatrician with Doctors Without Borders, I have met plenty of mothers in Niger. They walk for miles or work fields under a broiling desert sky carrying their babies on their backs. When a woman is parched, she suspects that her baby is, too — so she gives the baby some water. Breast milk is the best food for babies, but focusing only on exclusive breast-feeding masks the collective failure to provide safe water.

The severe malnutrition Mr. Kristof describes is far more prevalent in 1-year-old Niger infants — an age when breast milk must be complemented with animal-sourced foods to provide infants the nutritional value they need. The meager plant-based foods typical in the Niger diet are as much a contributor to early childhood deaths as poor water and malaria.

I have seen how combinations of better diagnosis and treatment of malaria, immunization and nutrition supplementation with good-quality foods for 6-to-24-month-olds are saving lives. The only reason these programs work is that mothers are willing partners.

SUSAN SHEPHERD
New York, June 29, 2011

We Still Need Your Help to Rewrite the Story of Malnutrition

Thursday, June 23rd, 2011

Over the past year, MSF has met with government officials from the top food aid donor countries and held photographic exhibitions and events in over a dozen countries in an international effort to rewrite the story of malnutrition.

Sign the “Starved for Attention” petition before June 27 to play an invaluable role in keeping the pressure on the top food aid governments to improve the nutritional quality of foods sent to feed malnourished children overseas.

On June 27 in Kansas City at the International Food Aid & Development Conference, the US government will announce reforms to its international food aid policy. This will be the first time the foods used in this decades-old, billion-dollar program will be significantly retooled.

Every year the US sends over a hundred thousand tons of fortified corn-soy bean flour to be used to make porridge to feed malnourished children, primarily in sub-Saharan Africa. Tragically, these flours, grown on American farms and processed in American factories, do not meet the nutritional requirements of these young, growing children.  Thus, the US sends inadequate food overseas to vulnerable children that it would not use in its domestic nutrition programs.

Unfortunately, the proposed food aid reforms being announced in Kansas City still fall far short of the highly successful nutritional standards employed in the Women, Infants, and Children’s (WIC) program that has helped wipe out childhood malnutrition in America. It’s time to end the double standard of US food aid.

We need your help to push the US government to ensure that the food sent to these vulnerable children actually meets their nutritional needs to grow and thrive.

Thank you for your support.

IRIN News: Getting the Recipe Right

Friday, May 13th, 2011

AID POLICY: Getting the recipe right for US food aid

© Antonin Kratochvil/VII

JOHANNESBURG, 13 May 2011 (IRIN) – Changing the food the US government supplies as aid could deliver better results and still save money, a new study says. The review for the US Agency for International Development (USAID) by researchers at the Tufts University Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy has been welcomed by NGOs and US food aid experts, but the findings have also come in for some criticism.

The two-year review considered if USAID food aid was up to date with current science, especially in its use of blended food and whether programmes matched the right products with expected outcomes.

“What we’re recommending is approaches to enhance the many great things already being done with US food aid under the most difficult circumstances imaginable,” Amelia Reese Masterson, research coordinator of the review, wrote to IRIN, referring in part to USAID’s budget pressures.

The review came up with 20 recommendations on some of the food products and programmes under Title II of the US Food for Peace Act, which covers food aid provided in emergency and non-emergency situations.

Getting the ingredients right

The Tufts review addressed the issue of the source of protein in food products for children, pregnant and lactating women, and undernourished people on HIV medication.

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has noted that US food aid destined for children usually comprises fortified flours based on grains and pulses such as corn-soya blend (CSB) or wheat-soy blend (WSB) and has lobbied for the inclusion of other sources of protein, vitamins and minerals.

Recent scientific evidence shows that animal-source proteins such as milk, better promote the growth of muscle tissue and resistance to infections, and are critical to children recovering from severe malnutrition, the Tufts review agreed. It also acknowledged that ready-to-use therapeutic foods (RUTF), usually lipid-based spreads, whose ingredients typically include nuts and milk powder, have led to a radical change in the way severe malnutrition is treated.

The review recommended that a wider range of products, offering varying quantities and types of nutrients for different programmatic contexts, be made available.

It is here that the review has contradicted itself, Nathalie Ernoult, Stephane Doyon and Susan Shepherd, members of the MSF’s nutrition team, maintained in a written submission to the Tufts academics.

A la carte or menu fixe?

“The report itself states that there can be no ‘one-size-fits-all’ food supplement, and we could not agree more,” the MSF team said, yet it “focuses primarily on how to improve the nutritional value of fortified blended flours.”

The Tufts study argued for a single formulation for a cost-effective, enhanced CSB, which they dubbed CSB14, to meet the minimum nutritional requirements of three key target groups: infants from 6 to 11 months; children between one and three years; and pregnant women.

The MSF team said at least two enhanced CSB formulations would be necessary: one tailored to the needs of infants and young children and those affected by moderate acute malnutrition; the other for older children and adults.

UN organizations the World Food Programme (WFP) and the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) are also considering experimenting with different formulations of CSB.

“As a field-level agency and occasional implementing partner for UNICEF and WFP, we [MSF] cannot over-emphasize the need for coherence in the nutritional supplements on offer for a given category of beneficiary,” the MSF team said. “If the fortified foods provided by WFP, UNICEF and USAID for similar programmes are not interchangeable, nutrition programmes will simply become confused and ineffective.”

MSF maintained that the formulation for younger children should have a higher protein content from animal-sourced food; and that the proposed fortification levels of iron and zinc were also too low.

Zita Weise Prinzo of the World Health Organization (WHO) said they were recommending that the diets of moderately malnourished children contain animal-sourced foods, without specifying how much. WHO is expected to release its guidelines for food formulations for moderately malnourished children in June 2011.

According to MSF, the proposed second formulation for older children and adults, would not require animal-sourced ingredients, and the current CSB recipe, with some adjustments to its vitamin and mineral content, would serve the purpose.

However, a senior nutritionist who preferred not be named told IRIN that in many instances it would be hard to imagine relief agencies successfully distributing two or more similar looking products for different segments even within a single family.

“Most large-scale programmes using CSB-type products involve take-home rations. It would be difficult for a programme to ensure the proper use of several similar products at home. The solution could be to have one ‘generic’ option used by most big programmes, similar to that proposed by the [Tufts] paper, and then several other options that would be used by ‘speciality’ programmes.”

The CSB14 formulation depends on the addition of oil fortified with vitamin A to provide enough of the vitamin. “Our experience shows that it is difficult to count on the prescribed amounts of oil being added to the porridge in the home, not to mention all the logistical difficulties encountered with the distribution of multiple commodities to constitute a single ration,” the MSF team pointed out.

The chemical forms of micronutrient supplements proposed by Tufts also differed from those on the list approved by the WFP, the biggest dispenser of US aid. “It is very important to come to common agreement on a list of acceptable chemical forms for all additives,” the MSF team noted.

PEPFAR food

Programming should “be evidence-based, not driven by simple data on tonnages and ‘hungry people fed’, but by an understanding of the unit cost of impact,” and this included HIV/AIDS-related programmes, said the review. It found that orphans and vulnerable children, and HIV-positive pregnant and lactating women, identified for priority food assistance in the US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), were receiving not getting priority compared to other HIV-positive women and adults.

The review suggested stronger links between ongoing antenatal, Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission (PMTCT), and Maternal and Child Health (MCH) services, and with programmes treating malnourished children.

PEPFAR country coordinators reported that requests to approve the use of funds for food were “commonly met with caution”, the review said, which “contributes to low coverage of food assistance within programmes”, and PEPFAR needed to send a stronger signal on supporting the allocation of funds to food in HIV support.

Saving money

Budget-constrained donors were “facing hard trade-offs between feeding as many people as possible and providing higher quality foods to improve nutritional impact per person,” said Christopher Barrett, a food aid expert who teaches development economics at Cornell University in the US.

Scarce resources should be put to work more efficiently, and the Tufts review contributed significantly to improving understanding of these tradeoffs by policymakers, operational agencies and commercial suppliers, Barrett commented.

“It’s important to move beyond a dollar-per-ton of food metric – the conventional way of looking at things – since that does not take into account exactly what kinds of foods are used for what purposes,” said Patrick Webb, principal investigator of the Tufts review project.

“If we become more efficient in treating or preventing malnutrition, then it’s the cost per case of malnutrition treated or prevented that matters, and that will go down when the appropriate tools (foods) are used in the right ways, even if unit costs of products rise slightly… because less is needed (over a shorter period of treatment).”

Some of the Tufts recommendations would cost more money – the addition of dairy products, new smaller packaging of some products for mothers and infants to prevent it from being consumed by the entire family – but Webb said the costs would be offset by improved targeting of the enhanced products.

Barrett noted that “With greater bang for the buck, it also becomes easier to defend valuable food aid programmes against those looking to trim budgets.”

The review, the issues it covers and its recommendations will be debated at the US government’s annual conference on food aid in June.

Starved for Attention Featured at Global Health Conference

Thursday, April 14th, 2011

The 13th Annual Northern California Global Health Conference, held last week in Davis, California, included a presentation on malnutrition by an MSF physician and a Starved for Attention campaign display.

The conference was organized by a consortium of area universities and this year was organized around the theme: Breaking Borders and Boundaries.

MSF emergency physician Jason Prystowsky delivered a talk on the global malnutrition crisis, focusing on the connections between poverty, food security, and childhood malnutrition.  Dr. Prystowsky drew on his experience treating severely malnourished children in MSF clinics in Sudan, explaining to the audience that “we know what the problem is and how to treat it. We have a moral responsibility to act”.

The Starved for Attention exhibit was on display at the conference, and has been installed in the student center of UC Davis’s Medical School in Sacramento for the next couple of months.

Dr Prystowsky speaks to the hundreds of students, professors, and health practicioners who attended the conference.

Conference attendees look through campaign materials and view the Starved for Attention films.

Dr Prystowsky answers questions after his talk.

France 24 Spotlights Patent Battle Over Malnutrition Treatment

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

France 24’s broadcast program Beyond Business takes a look at the legal battle over the patent for the life-saving ready-to-use therapeutic food, PlumpyNut. In the studio interview, MSF nutrition expert Stephane Doyon explains how the patent stymies efforts to treat malnutrition effectively and affordably. Watch the report.

A Bangladeshi mother feeds PlumpyNut to her child in a malnutrition clinic. © Ron Haviv/VII

Starved for Attention Targets the European Union

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010
In advance of World Food Day, MSF installed a jumbo LED screen in the heart of the European Union quarter of Brussels to display Starved for Attention images. The nearly 120 square foot screen counts the number of children suffering from malnutrition each week, and challenges the European Union, one of the largest food aid donors, to reform its policies to meet their nutritional needs.
Médecins Sans Frontières a installé, sur le Rond-point Schuman à Bruxelles, un grand écran qui comptabilise le nombre de nouveaux cas de malnutrition chez les enfants (2,678,571 à la fin de la semaine). Cette action est organisée dans le cadre de la Journée mondiale de l’alimentation du 16 octobre. Signez la pétition pour demander que l’aide alimentaire fournie par l’Union européenne soit enfin mieux adaptée aux besoins nutritionnels des enfants.


MSF staff collect signatures for the Starved for Attention petition.

The Starved for Attention display in Schuman Square, Brussels.

Brookings Institution Hosts Panel Discussion on Childhood Malnutrition

Monday, October 18th, 2010

On October 12th, MSF and the Wolfensohn Center for Development at the Brookings Institution hosted a discussion of the challenges in global food assistance and how recent developments and initiatives can be expanded to effectively tackle the ongoing crisis of global child malnutrition.

Panelists included MSF’s Nutrition Coordinator Dr. Susan Shepherd; Bruce Cogill, chief of nutrition at USAID; Meera Shekar, lead health and nutrition specialist at the World Bank; and Victoria Quinn, senior vice president for progams, Helen Keller International. Elaine Wolfensohn, founder of the Wolfensohn Family Foundation, made introductory remarks. Brookings Nonresident Senior Fellow Raj Desai moderated the discussion.

Watch the discussion and Q & A here:

(from L to R) Victoria Quinn, Susan Shepherd, Raj Desai, Bruce Cogill, and Meera Shekar

Susan Shepherd described MSF's efforts to treat malnourished children in the Sahel region of Africa.

Meera Shekar, lead nutrition specialist at the World Bank, told the Brookings audience that greater collaboration among donors would make the fight against malnutrition more effective.