UN health R&D summit 'leaves the greater part of the job undone.' MSF's Statement at the close of the UN Health R&D Summit
Food Crisis Campaign director talks to the BBC about the food crisis and highlights children's special nutritional needs
Children become malnourished when they do not receive the adequate nutrients their bodies require to resist infection and maintain growth. When nutritional deficiencies become too significant, a child will begin to 'waste' – to consume his/her own tissues to obtain needed nutrients. Wasting is a sign of acute malnutrition.
In some regions of the world, such as in Africa's Sahel, wasting is particularly
frequent among children during the 'hunger gap' period, between harvests. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that there are 20 million young
children with severe acute malnutrition at any given point in time.
Food Aid Basket Missing Critical Ingredients
MSF response to The Lancet series on malnutrition
The Hospital on the Edge of Town: Treating MDR TB in Karakalpakstan