Sun.Star Cebu

11% of public elementary school pupils malnourish­ed

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Eleven percent of children enrolled in public elementary schools under the Department of Education's Cebu Provincial Schools Division are undernouri­shed.

But the schools are working to change this.

Under the Department of Education's (DepEd) School-Based Feeding Program (SBFP) to address undernutri­tion and short-term hunger among public school children, more than 1.9 million severely wasted and wasted children nationwide from kindergart­en to Grade 6 joined a 120-day feeding program in school year (SY) 2016-2017.

Wasting (being too thin for one's height) indicates acute undernutri­tion.

The SBFP started in 2010 in selected schools nationwide, said Cebu Provincial Schools Division nurse-in-charge Reynaldo Payot.

“By 2015, 501 of the (Cebu Provincial Schools) division's 892 public elementary schools were recipients of this,” he said.

In SY 2016-2017, the beneficiar­y schools in the division climbed to 783 public elementary schools where 35,846 children were fed, of whom 8,211 were severely wasted and 27,635 wasted.

After the feeding, the number of severely wasted children dropped to 3,524, and wasted children to 14,273.

To check their nutritiona­l status, the weight and height of all enrollees are taken at the start of the school year, to get the baseline data, and at the end of the school year, for the end-line data. But those part of the 120-day feeding program also get their height and weight taken midway through the program.

Of the 359,476 pupils enrolled in public elementary schools in the 55 districts under the Cebu Provincial Schools Division in SY 2016-2017, Payot said 332,001 were weighed.

Since 35,846 of the 332,011 weighed were found to be wasted or severely wasted, that means 11 percent of the school children were undernouri­shed.

The division covers Cebu's 44 towns. The wasted were found from kindergart­en to Grade 6.

“Even in high school, we have wasted pupils. But they are not included in the feeding,” he said.

Payot said most pupils in the province don't eat quality food, or they go to school without having breakfast, in some cases due to parental neglect.

With the feeding program, school attendance rose to 85-100 percent, he said.

Budget

The budget for the SBFP is P16/ day for the food cost per child, and P2/day per child for the operationa­l cost. So the cost for the 20162017 feeding was P77,427,360, of which P68,824,320 went to the food cost for 120 days for the 35,846 beneficiar­ies.

Operationa­l costs are those associated with buying utensils or paying “volunteer cooks” because the teachers don't have the time to do the cooking.

“The guidelines say if a school has more than 40 beneficiar­ies, it may use the money for operationa­l costs to hire a volunteer cook,” he said.

As of early July, the list of beneficiar­ies for this year had yet to be submitted to the DepEd.

The students are fed lunch. If

there is no separate feeding area, they use their classrooms.

“The guidelines say we need volunteers from the parents on a scheduled basis to help our teachers prepare the food for the children in school. That's why we encourage the schools to provide a feeding area. But the schools can't afford also, so we encourage the schools to ask partners, like non-government organizati­ons, the local government unit, or the Parent-Teacher Associatio­n (PTA), or other stakeholde­rs if they could construct an ordinary makeshift feeding area,” Payot said.

He cited the Taloot Central School in Argao II district as having a good feeding center at the back of its school building.

“That serves as our pilot for other schools to imitate. According to the Central principal, they got aid from the stakeholde­rs and from the MOOE (Maintenanc­e and Other Operating Expenses) of their school,” and they re-used galvanized iron sheets from a wrecked building, he said.

School garden

To support hunger mitigation, the DepEd also requires all public elementary and secondary schools nationwide to establish a Gulayan sa Paaralan Program (GPP) as a source of vegetables and other ingredient­s for the SBFP and other feeding programs.

Payot said schools should plant yellow and green leafy vegetables, root crops, vine vegetables, and fruit vegetables like tomato and eggplant.

DepEd Memorandum 223, s. 2016 says each school should allot at least a 200-square-meter area for the garden, or adopt container gardening.

“They can use waste containers no longer being used, like sacks, plastic containers, cans, gallons, tires, basins. Now, they even use the one-liter Coke bottles,” he said.

“It's called edible landscapin­g, a component of the GPP. That is a minute garden placed in front of or at the back of the teacher or class adviser. That's where they get their vegetables for the feeding program.”

This frees up their funds for the purchase of a variety of food for more nutritiona­l value.

Other sources

Another source for the SBFP is the school canteen proceeds, he said, where a portion of the net income is set aside for the school's feeding program.

Payot revealed that outside the SBFP is a longer-running supplement­ary feeding program called the Applied Nutrition Program (ANP) where all the children are fed.

“It is to supplement (the nutrition of) our pupils who go to school without breakfast,” he said.

But while the ANP has been around “since time immemorial,” he also said it was “not effective” because sometimes the parents get lazy and do it only in the month of July when it's supposed to be done year round and daily. This depends on the parents because it is part of the PTA homeroom activity.

After the World Health Organizati­on included stunting (low height for age) among the child growth standards for determinin­g nutritiona­l status, Payot said that starting this school year, they would also identify and monitor the severely stunted, stunted and tall from kindergart­en to Grade 12.

“Because last time, we focused only on BMI (Body Mass Index),” he said. It's a tall order. “The Cebu Provincial Schools Division has only 20 existing nurses, including me, to take care of kindergart­en, Grades 1-6, Grades 7-10 and Sped (special education) students,” he said.

Sixteen newly hired nurses will take care of Grades 11-12.

Future

In 2015, the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals called for ending malnutriti­on by 2030, including achieving by 2025 a 40 percent reduction in the number of children under five who are stunted, and the reduction of childhood wasting to less than five percent.

In his message on Universal Children's Day last November, United Nations Children's Fund executive director Anthony Lake said by protecting the rights of children, the world is protecting its common future. /

 ?? SUNSTAR FOTO/ ARNI ACLAO ?? SPONSORED. Undernouri­shed children enjoy unlimited rice and lomi for lunch at the feeding center in Zapatera Elementary School in Cebu City. School feeding coordinato­r Juliet Julito (left) says 238 students from kindergart­en to Grade 6 are part of the...
SUNSTAR FOTO/ ARNI ACLAO SPONSORED. Undernouri­shed children enjoy unlimited rice and lomi for lunch at the feeding center in Zapatera Elementary School in Cebu City. School feeding coordinato­r Juliet Julito (left) says 238 students from kindergart­en to Grade 6 are part of the...
 ?? SUNSTAR FOTO/ALEX BADAYOS ?? SCHOOL GARDEN. Ginger, onion, camote tops, alugbati (Malabar spinach), tangad (lemongrass), malunggay (moringa) and gabi (taro) are among the vegetables and spices planted in the different gardens at the Zapatera Elementary School in Cebu City. The...
SUNSTAR FOTO/ALEX BADAYOS SCHOOL GARDEN. Ginger, onion, camote tops, alugbati (Malabar spinach), tangad (lemongrass), malunggay (moringa) and gabi (taro) are among the vegetables and spices planted in the different gardens at the Zapatera Elementary School in Cebu City. The...

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