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Introduction to Nutrition in Emergencies

Introduction to Nutrition in Emergencies. Module 01. Learning Objectives. Know where most nutrition emergencies occur Understand what causes nutrition emergencies Know which groups are most nutritionally vulnerable in an emergency

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Introduction to Nutrition in Emergencies

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  1. Introduction to Nutrition in Emergencies Module 01

  2. Learning Objectives • Know where most nutrition emergencies occur • Understand what causes nutrition emergencies • Know which groups are most nutritionally vulnerable in an emergency • Be aware of the different types of malnutrition that arise in emergencies • Be aware of the range of emergency nutrition responses and when they are appropriate • Have a better understanding of the operational challenges in Nutrition in Emergencies

  3. What is an emergency? • Various definitions exist such as: Any situation where there is an exceptional and widespread threat to life, health and basic subsistence, which is beyond the coping capacity of individuals and the community” (Oxfam Humanitarian Policy, 2003.) • ‘Complex emergency’ refers to a major humanitarian crisis of a multi-causal nature, essentially from internal or external conflict and which requires an international response that extends beyond the mandate or capacity of any single agency • Distinction between loud and silent emergencies stresses the fact that there is often a serious disconnect between need and response • Loud emergencies: catastrophic events such as natural disaster or war. Receive considerable international publicity and massive humanitarian response (of varying degrees of adequacy) • Silent emergencies: protracted and receive limited international attention and insufficient humanitarian response.

  4. What types of Emergencies are common in country x?

  5. What types of Emergencies are common in country x? • Complex – conflict-related • Droughts • Floods (often with landslides) • Earthquakes • Famine

  6. What is an emergency? (2) Emergencies cover a wide variety of different scenarios. They differ in terms of: • Length(short-term, chronic) • Cause(natural, conflict-related {‘complex’}, economic-political) • Impact(destruction of infrastructure, agricultural, health and social systems) • Affected groups(internally displaced persons, refugees, stable populations) • Humanitarian response (large-scale response, no response at all)

  7. What is Malnutrition?

  8. What is a nutrition emergency • Many classification systems exist, which agree on the definition of the situation through progressive stages, the most severe being labeled “famine” • Most systems combine CMR and wasting for classifying the situation, as this 1995 UN SCN threshold system:

  9. Integrated Phase Classification system (IPC) • Most recent classification system to be developed • Builds significantly on other systems • Aims to develop a common scale for food security classification comparable across countries • Facilitates identification of priorities for intervention before situation becomes catastrophic • Includes a much wider variety of non-nutrition indicators such as disease, access to water and conflict

  10. Summary of IPC food crises and famine classification system with thresholds

  11. Where do Nutrition Emergencies occur? • The largest famines in terms of excess deaths have occurred in Asia • China (1958-1962) killed 30 million people • Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (1990s) killed up to 3.5 million people • Root cause for both famines was government policies that led to massive food shortages • Africa has suffered more frequent famines but with fewer deaths (lower population density) • Ethiopia (1983-1985) famine due to drought killed 1 million people • Famines in the the twentieth century killed more than 70 million people • Is there currently an ongoing famine, if yes where?

  12. Where do Nutrition Emergencies occur? (2)

  13. Where do Nutrition Emergencies occur? (3)

  14. Vulnerability to Nutrition Emergencies? • Existing health and nutrition situation greatly affects how vulnerable a population is to a nutritional emergency • HIV and AIDS increases food insecurity, poverty, and even has negative effects on labour force and agriculture at large scale • Poverty and urban pressureovercrowding, inadequate drinking water, substandard sanitation facilities and infrastructure, exposure to urban pollution and hazardous materials, landlessness, and frequent food shortages • Climate change may have an increasing impact leading to more frequent famines in the future

  15. Triggers for Nutrition Emergencies • Natural disasters affect food availability and access, disrupt health systems, destroy WASH systems • Conflict can lead to Nutrition Emergencies in many ways due to lack of access to food, health, WASH, etc. • Political crises and economic shocks contribute to Nutrition Emergencies through discrimination of ethnic groups or inadequate political decisions (China famine in the late 50s) • Global food prices fluctuations have caused increased levels of poverty, food insecurity and resulting undernutrition

  16. Who are the most vulnerable in emergencies? • Physiological vulnerability: children less than 5, older people, people affected by chronic diseases, gender • Geographical vulnerability: flood or drought-prone areas, conflict front lines • Political vulnerability: discrimination, persecution • Internal displacement and refugee status: 26 million IDPs, 16 million refugees at the end of 2010 (minus the Arab spring displacements).

  17. What types of malnutrition occur in emergencies? • The major concern in emergencies is the increased risk of moderate and severe acute malnutrition because acute malnutrition is strongly associated with death • In many long-term emergencies levels of other forms of malnutrition (stunting and underweight) are often high • Stunting inhibits a child from reaching his or her full physical and mental potential • Can have a major impact on work output and national development • Is becoming an increasingly important measure of nutritional wellbeing in some emergencies • Micronutrient deficiencies are common in emergencies, particularly in affected people dependent on food rations

  18. Nutrition assessments in emergencies • Aims at establishing the prevalenceof malnutrition in emergency-affected populations using internationally agreed upon standard methods • Anthropometric information and various indicators are collected for identifying direct, underlying and basic causes of malnutrition • Will be covered in modules 6 & 7

  19. Internationally used emergency thresholdsBased on NCHS reference • Aggravating Factors: • Inadequate general food ration • CMR > 1/10,000/day • Epidemic of measles or whooping cough • High incidence of respiratory or diarrhoeal diseases

  20. Nutrition Responses • A wide variety of response options exist for the different phases of food and nutrition crises • See Handout for detailed list • Working with the community All emergency related programming needs to work with the support of the community • Disaster-affected people possess and acquire skills, knowledge and capacities to cope with, respond to and recover from disasters • Local population is usually the first to react in a disaster and even early in a response some degree of participation is always feasible • Explicit efforts to listen to, consult and engage people at an early stage will increase quality and community management later in the programme •  ”Active participation in humanitarian response is an essential foundation of people’s right to life with dignity” Code of Conduct for the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement; Sphere handbook, 2011.

  21. Challenges in Nutrition in Emergencies • Lack of impartiality in responding to nutrition emergencies: response does not match needs at global level • Political and media focus often followed by higher rates of response • Most undernourished children are in “non emergency” countries • Dominance of food aid: represents the most funded domain of all humanitarian interventions. Changing slowly • Constraints of the operational environment: access to the populations in need is often difficult for many reasons such as weak infrastructure, insecurity

  22. Challenges in Nutrition in Emergencies (2) • HIV and AIDS and Nutrition: stigma, discrimination and lack of international guidelines remain common challenges for humanitarian workers • Lack of an evidence base for interventions: only a few interventions are based on clear evidence • Lack of skills and expertise in Nutrition in Emergencies: national capacity is often missing in many countries affected by nutrition emergencies.

  23. Key Messages • Protecting the nutritional status of vulnerable groups affected by emergencies is essential to prevent acute malnutrition, disease and death. • Several systems exist for the classification of food and nutrition crisis; the IPC system is one example which has been adopted by several agencies and governments to analyse and design responses to food insecurity • Nutrition emergencies are primarily caused by severe shortages of food combined with disease epidemics though underlying factors such as poor care and feeding practices, and insufficient access to health care and an unsafe environment all contribute • While Asia and Africa have suffered significant famines over the past 100 years, food and nutrition crises continue and many countries on both continents have baseline levels of acute malnutrition that indicate emergency response interventions are required

  24. Key messages (2) • Acute malnutrition is a major concern during emergencies, but chronic malnutrition and micronutrient deficiencies are also issues in certain emergency affected populations. A range of nutrition interventions are typically implemented in an emergency, both to prevent and treat acute malnutrition as well as support livelihoods • Existing challenges in the area of Nutrition in Emergencies include: • Lack of commonly agreed classification system for nutritional crises • Limited evidence for an effective model to treat moderate acute malnutrition • Constraints to the operating environment • Inadequate skills and expertise in nutrition in emergencies at national level • Linking relief, recovery and development efforts • Linking nutrition interventions with each other and with other sectors

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