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Reforming quality of global food aid critical to fight childhood malnutrition

The world’s top food aid donors, including the United States, Canada, Japan, and the European Union, continue to supply and finance nutritionally substandard foods to developing countries, despite conclusive scientific evidence of their ineffectiveness in reducing childhood malnutrition, said the international medical humanitarian organization Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) today, in advance of World Food Day on October 16.

Malnutrition—a preventable and treatable condition—affects 195 million children worldwide, the majority of whom live in areas not affected by armed conflicts. It is the underlying cause of at least one-third of the eight million annual deaths of children under five years of age. Malnutrition is not merely the result of too little food.

The first two years of life are a critical window when children need access to a diet consisting of high-quality protein, essential fats, carbohydrates, vitamins, and minerals, in order to avoid impaired growth and development, increased risk of death from common illnesses, or life-long health and developmental impairment. Yet food aid largely does not include these essential ingredients for early childhood growth and development.

“Food aid donors have to put the nutritional needs of young children at the center of their policies to address childhood malnutrition,” said MSF International President Dr. Unni Karunakara. The vast majority of childhood nutrition programs in developing countries that are supported by international food assistance rely almost exclusively on fortified blended flours such as corn- and soy-blend (CSB) cereals. CSB cereals do not meet international standards for the nutritional needs of children less than two years of age.

“Foods we would never give our own children are being sent overseas as food aid to the most vulnerable children in malnutrition hotspots in sub-Saharan Africa and parts of Asia,” said Dr. Karunakara. “This double standard must stop.”

MSF has launched an international campaign, “Starved for Attention”, to urge countries making the largest contributions to food assistance—including the U.S., Canada, the European Union, and Japan—to supply the right foods and adequate resources for nutrition programs in countries most affected by malnutrition. MSF has sent letters to the heads of these governments, and to top U.S. government officials, to call for the reform of their food aid policies. Tens of thousands of people have already signed the petition that will be presented to leaders on the eve of the G8 Summit in France in 2011.

Countries that have successfully reduced early childhood malnutrition—including Mexico, Thailand, the U.S., and many European countries—have done so through programs that ensure infants and young children from even the poorest families have access to quality foods, such as milk and eggs.

International food assistance has failed to keep up with advances in nutritional science for childhood development. In October 2008, a World Health Organization panel of nutrition experts recognized that CSB is inappropriate for treating malnourished children, in part because it can inhibit the absorption of important proteins and other nutrients essential to a young child’s recovery from malnutrition.

“Despite an international consensus on the most appropriate nutritional composition of foods for malnourished children, donor countries continue to subsidize and supply a one-size fits all product that we know fails to meet this standard and fails to decrease the risk of death due to malnutrition,” said Dr. Susan Shepherd, MSF nutrition advisor.  “We have seen huge advances in the ways to protect children from malnutrition. No child should have to reach the brink of death before getting access to the nutrition they need to grow and thrive.”

MSF medical teams witness the human devastation caused by malnutrition throughout the world. In 2009, MSF treated 250,000 children suffering from acute malnutrition in 116 programs in 34 countries. MSF is currently operating 120 nutrition programs in 36 countries. In Niger alone this year, more than 100,000 children have been treated for severe acute malnutrition.