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The state of Women and Children in IDP camps

Earlier in the year, the Executive Director of the Board, Dr Sule Mele, disclosed this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Maiduguri.
Mele said the victims were aged between one and five years. He said more than 209,577 children have been screened for various illnesses, including malnutrition, malaria, diarrhoea and vomiting.
According to him, about 6,444 severe cases of malnutrition was recorded in the camps, 25,511 have mild to moderate symptoms, while 177,622 among them were not malnourished. He attributed the large number of malnutrition to lack of access to highly nutritious foods in the camps. โ€œPoor feeding practices, such as inadequate breastfeeding, offering the wrong foods and not ensuring that the child gets enough nutritious food also contribute to malnutrition.
โ€œThe food that is mostly served in the camps is always adults in nature which affect the health, growth and physical development of the children. โ€œEven if the children get enough to eat, they will become malnourished if the food they eat does not provide the proper amounts of micro-nutrients, vitamins and minerals to meet daily nutritional requirements.
โ€œThe children should at least be fed with an enriched groundnut pap, crayfish, periwinkles, millet, soya beans, moi-moi, fishes, pap, ugba and a whole lot of others.
โ€œThe effects of inadequate nutrition and malnutrition include stunting and recurrent infections or chronic diseases. โ€œPoor nutrition in terms of foods and feeding behaviours, especially during the first two years of life can lead to low immunity, significant illness, late development and death,โ€™โ€™ he said.
However, Mele said the state government is partnering with an NGO, Community-Based Management of Acute Malnutrition (CMAM), in treating children with severe acute malnutrition in the camps. He urged the Federal Government to adopt the U.S. Special Supplemental Nutrition Programme for Women, Infants and Children (WIC), for healthcare and nutrition to enable proper supplementary feeding for the kids in IDP camps. (NAN)

Philanthropist, Modupe Ozolua recently shared photos of severely malnourished children rescued from Boko Haramโ€™s captivity in Sambisa Forest by the Army. Her NGO – Empower54 had traveled to the ravaged community of Bama, Borno State to identify the needs of thousands of IDPs present there, in-order to see how arrangements could be made for them. Here are photos and a video showing the state of the children still starving due to lack of aids sent to them…

boko

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