Malnutrition cases rise as Covid-19
SEATED under a mango tree at her rented apartment in Lusaka, Highfield, a high-density suburb south of Harare, Sharon Gomwe (37), a single mother and vendor, ponders on what to do to secure food for her family of four.
Since the onset of the lockdown, life has not been easy.
The movement restrictions mean that she is no longer able to sell second-hand clothes from which she earned a living.
The strange perception going around Harare that second-hand clothes actually used to belong to people that have died from Covid-19 has not helped matters.
Feeding her three children is now proving difficult because she has no other source of income.
Her youngest child has recently been taken ill and at the clinic she was told the child is malnourished and requires better food.
As she sits under the tree, deep in thought, she is disturbed by a health worker, who joins her and begins to talk about measures to prevent the pandemic.
As the conversation gets deeper, the health worker stresses the importance of nutrition during this period.
But Gomwe says to herself: “Who cares about nutrition when one cannot afford even a single meal?”
The media has been awash with messages on how to prevent Covid-19, but the issue of nutrition is seldom talked about.
While ironically, the pandemic has caused obesity in some families owing to lack of exercise during lockdown, for Gomwe and many other poor families, the lockdown has meant food shortages and malnourishment.
This is the situation that most informal traders in Zimbabwe find themselves in.
They have been locked in their houses without food; their means of income forcibly stopped as government clamps down on street vending and other activities.
The government has not put any social security nets in place to assist the majority of Zimbabweans, who depend on buying and selling on the streets. As a result, many people in Zimbabwe are going hungry in their homes during this pandemic.
The emergence of Covid-19 has brought about disruptions along food supply chains that complicate the transportation of food to markets while restrictions of movement impact access to markets by consumers.
Loss of jobs and therefore incomes in the face of interruption or lack of social protection mechanisms has become a pertinent issue in most developed counties.
Inevitably, nutrition is heavily compromised in a huge number of families in poor nations and children bear the brunt of this situation.
But director in the Department of Nutrition and Food Safety, World Health Organisation (WHO), Francesco Branca, stressed that the protection of children’s nutrition during the Covid-19 pandemic was uppermost on the organisation’s priority list.
However, the Joint Malnutrition Estimates (JME) published in April 2021 revealed insufficient progress to reach the World Health Assembly targets set for 2025 and the Sustainable Development Goals set for 2030.
In his presentation during the Global Nutrition and Food Security Reporting Programme, Branca said children and adolescent obesity had also increased during Covid-19 pandemic.
“Food systems are comprised of a set of dynamic and interlinked sub-systems,” he said.
“However, the transformation of food systems requires a series of transition steps, which can be distilled into four distinct policy objectives: producing the right mix of foods in sufficient quantities to deliver sustainable, healthy diets; ensuring those foods are readily accessible and also affordable to everyone; and ensuring that they are desirable to all con