Reuters AlertNet Full site
Homepage | Newsdesk | NGO Latest | Crisis briefings | Country profiles | MediaWatch | Jobs | Alerting | Login
AID WORKER DIARY: Birth, barbecued maize and the weekly shop
04 Sep 2008 10:54:00 GMT
Written by: Jill Clare Mowbray
Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author's alone.
A mother carries her malnourished child in the yard of Medicine Sans Frontieres facility near Sheshemene, southern Ethiopia, June 8, 2008. REUTERS/Radu Sigheti
A mother carries her malnourished child in the yard of Medicine Sans Frontieres facility near Sheshemene, southern Ethiopia, June 8, 2008. REUTERS/Radu Sigheti

Many more donkey and carts are seen on a daily basis now, laden with maize, cabbages, bananas and ginger going to and from markets. In most of the areas, there is now a visible reduction in the severe acute malnutrition admissions. Hopefully this trend will continue if the crops are successful and prices stable enough for people to afford to buy and sell their food. And more selfishly, MSF staff are very happy that we can now have a more varied diet. BBQ maize is very good!

Last week I helped to complete a rapid assessment in two communities badly affected by malnutrition in the Kachabira and Tambara districts. The rapid assessment tool was a questionnaire used to gather information on household sizes, ages of the children and adults, morbidity since April and numbers of people in the MSF programme.

The average household size is 9 to 12 people. They live in tukuls, round, thatched single room buildings made with wood and mud. They cook and sleep in the same place, often with animals. It was a strange experience to be talking to the families while donkeys and goats were walking in and out of the tukuls eating maize leaves. The results showed that MSF managed to target the worst affected areas and although the situation is still serious, morbidity is greatly reduced since our intervention.

In the Outpatient Therapeutic Programme (OTP) in Hadero we are discharging a lot of people now that they are reaching their target weight, and oedema is resolving. We receive many thanks, but the smiles are the best reward.

One old man arrives on donkey and cart each week. Six weeks ago he could not sit unaided. This week he was sitting and smiling. Next week he will be discharged. Hopefully food will be available for him and all the other discharged patients to prevent them getting sick again in the coming weeks and months. Time will tell.

In the meantime, we continue to work hard screening communities, ensuring that the moderately malnourished receive assistance early to prevent them becoming severely malnourished.

We have many pregnant and breast-feeding women in the moderate acute malnutrition programme, where we provide food rations every two weeks. I have seen quite a few women who one week they are pregnant and the next visit they are breast-feeding. One woman arrived on donkey and cart the same day as giving birth to collect her rations. Quite different to Europe. Not sure we would see anyone doing their weekly shop on the same day as giving birth there, especially not on a donkey and cart!

Click here to read more of MSF UK's letters from the field.

Reuters AlertNet is not responsible for the content of external websites.

Del.icio.us Del.icio.us  |   Digg Digg  |   NewsVine NewsVine  |   Reddit Reddit   
We welcome argument but AlertNet will not publish comments that are racist, abusive or libellous.

Leave a Reply

Enter the code shown on the left *

When you submit a comment to us we request your name, e-mail address and optionally a link to a website. Please note where you submit a website address, we may link to it via your name. By sending us a comment, you accept that we have the right to show the comment and your name to users. Although we require your email address, this will not be published on the site, and is only required to enable us to check facts with you, e.g. if you are making a claim we can not confirm easily. Additionally, if you would like your comment removed at anytime, you'll have to use this e-mail address when you contact us. To remove a comment at any time please e-mail us at blogs-(at)-reuters-(dot)-com (address obscured to avoid spam) specifying who you are and what you would like removed. We moderate all comments and will publish everything that advances the post directly or with relevant tangential information. We reserve the right to edit comments in order to maintain the quality of the comments, and may not include links to irrelevant material. We try not to publish comments that we think are offensive or appear to pass you off as another person, and we will be conservative if comments may be considered libelous. Reuters will use your data in accordance with Reuters privacy policy. Reuters Group is primarily responsible for managing your data. As Reuters is a global company your data will be transferred and available internationally, including in countries which do not have privacy laws but Reuters seeks to comply with its privacy policy.

All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content in this article, including by framing or by similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.

Jill Clare Mowbray is a British nurse working on Medecins Sans Frontieres' (MSF) nutritional emergency programme in southern Ethiopia. She is in charge of the outreach therapeutic programme of Hadero, one of the districts where MSF has cared for most severely malnourished patients.

Latest bloggers

More bloggers
China: Death as business

China: Protest against government “hook” by chopping little finger off

Afghanistan: UN withdraws from Kabul?

Afghanistan: Security deteriorates, says report

Laos: Concert to raise funds for typhoon victims



Disclaimers |  Copyright |  Privacy |  Contact Us |  Feedback |  About Us |  RSS XML

Last updated:Sun Nov 22 23:27:09 2009