Daily Sabah (Turkey)

UN warns of ‘catastroph­ic’ child malnutriti­on

- LONDON / REUTERS

THE COST of life-saving treatment for the most severely malnourish­ed children is set to jump by up to 16% due to the ongoing war in Ukraine and pandemic disruption­s, the United Nations’ children’s agency said yesterday.

The raw ingredient­s of a ready-to-use therapeuti­c food (RUTF) have leapt in price amid the global food crisis sparked by the war and pandemic, UNICEF said.

Without further funding in the next six months, 600,000 more children may miss out on the essential treatment, which is a high-energy paste made of ingredient­s including peanuts, oil, sugar and added nutrients.

UNICEF said a carton of the specialize­d nutrition containing 150 packets – enough for six to eight weeks to bring a severely malnourish­ed child back to health – cost about $41 on average before the up to 16% price rise. It will need about $25 million to cover the added cost, the agency said.

Alongside the wider pressure on food security, including climate change, the price rise could lead to “catastroph­ic” levels of severe malnutriti­on, the children’s agency warned in a statement.

“The world is rapidly becoming a virtual tinderbox of preventabl­e child deaths and child suffering from wasting,” said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell.

Severe wasting, when children are too thin for their height, affects 13.6 million children under 5 years old, and results in one-in-five deaths among this age group. Even before the war and pandemic, two-in-three did not have access to the therapeuti­c food needed to save their lives, UNICEF said.

 ?? ?? A child and her family who fled from Mariupol arrive in Zaporizhzh­ia, Ukraine, May 8, 2022.
A child and her family who fled from Mariupol arrive in Zaporizhzh­ia, Ukraine, May 8, 2022.

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