Malnutrition: Why Aisha Buhari ‘got Involved’
The United Nations Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF), in 2012 released a report tagged ‘At a Glance: Nigeria’. The report stated that: “Nigeria has one of the highest rates of infant mortality in the world. One in seven children dies before her or his fifth birthday.” It noted further that in Nigeria, clean water was hard to come by in northern Nigeria and singled out the General Hospital, Katsina as one health facility among several others in northern Nigeria where ‘half a dozen infants were being treated for severe malnutrition problems.”
In its 2010 report titled, No Child Born To Die, another global partner in child development- Save the Children reported a survey it conducted in Daura and Zango – both in northern Nigeria, thus, “Although Nigeria possesses great wealth in oil and has experienced recent economic growth, 54 per cent of its people live below the poverty line. The poorest 20 per cent of children are three times more likely to be underweight than the richest 20 per cent.
“A mother’s malnutrition is closely linked to malnourishment in her newborn babies and children, so the fact that 18.4 per cent of women of child-bearing age in Katsina State were found to be undernourished is a cause for concern.“Besides poverty, the other key cause of malnutrition is a lack of access to healthcare, water and sanitation. In northern Nigeria, for example, only 0.9 per cent of infants receive all basic vaccinations and in the two local government areas studied, 34 per cent did not have safe drinking water and 22 per cent did not have a safe way of disposing of human waste.”
The report further decried the disinclination of previous administration in the country to social protection policy. According to its document, No Child Born To Die, “Social protection coverage is negligible. Nigeria currently spends less on social protection than other sub-Saharan African countries, and two-thirds of its overall social protection expenditure goes to the civil service. Where programmes do exist the payments are of marginal value, health services are often inadequate, and there is a lack of well-trained officials and institutional capacity to implement policies.”
Aware of these challenges and to let every citizen feel the impact of government, the Wife of the President, Mrs Aisha Buhari is determined to give everyone a sense of belonging, beyond the channeling of attention to women and children only. This is evident in the christening of her pet project- Future Assured and its offshoot, Get Involved – names that are by no means suggestive of asymmetry but inclusive in form and nature. As the future is assured for women, so it is for men through the various action plans that Mrs Buhari is rolling out for the upliftment of families and society. To her, needless to empower a woman only, when the man also needs empowerment to cater and support the woman and child. The man, after all, is also a crucial component of the family unit.
It is based on this understanding that the wife of the President recently launched Get Involved- a quick interventionist programme to halt yearly deaths of malnourished children in the country on the strength that every child is entitled to a meal every day. She believes that when children are fed regularly and in the required proportions, their parents save money for medications and are free from mental and financial stresses. Nationally, the image and Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the country are enhanced when its citizens are healthy.
Moreover, by the christening of the programme, it calls for the involvement and supports of local and foreign government agencies and private organizations. Already, some international bodies besides UNICEF and Save The Children are currently assisting Nigeria in the fight against poverty, malnutrition and child mortality. They include World Health Organization (WHO), Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), Partnership for Transforming Health Systems (PATHS) and Department For International Development (DFID).
Currently, the new British Prime Minister Theresa May has been appointed a new ministerial team for the department, which has planned to provide 100 million pounds through the Girls’ Education Challenge to help girls who have dropped out or never attended school. And with the commitments Mrs Buhari is showing in promoting girls education and other issues concerning the girl-child, Nigeria is likely to benefit from the grant and other grants that have been set aside by development partners in implementing policies aimed at guaranteeing quality food, health, education, sanitation and safe drinking water for every Nigerian.
She has commenced these intervention measures at Bama and Maiduguri camps for the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) where she donated four tons of ready to use WomanBeing products (Soy Kunu for adults/ pregnant and lactating mothers and Soyalac for children) to fight malnutrition prevalent among inmates in the camps. These inmates are not only women and children but also adolescent boys, fathers and grandfathers.
The Wife of the President also cares about widows, less privileged and people living with disabilities across the country that she distributed food items such as bags of rice, spaghetti, semolina, packaged garri, sustard, gallons of vegetable oil and cartons of tomato paste among them last month to cushion effects of hunger among the young and old, irrespective of their sex.
And to strengthen her concern for parents of the abducted Government Secondary School, Chibok students in Borno State, Mrs Buhari recently presented N30 million cash support to them to alleviate their anguish over the disappearance of their girl-children. Each parent of the 215 children that are yet to be rescued got a cash of N139, 000.
In Nigeria, government organizations whose participation is also being sought by the Wife of the President in combating hunger and ensuring qualitative health and education among citizens include Ministries of Health, Agriculture and Rural Development, Education, Women Affairs and Youth and Sports Development. Already, the Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole has recently launched Rapid Result Initiative to hasten healthcare intervention in the country while National Agency for Food Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has been vigorous in Vitamin A food fortification, not only for children, but for every citizen. According to NAFDAC, foods fortified with Vitamin A help in improving eyesight and developing bones, muscles and body cells and tissues.
Mrs Buhari also expects the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) to join hands in mitigating high mortality rates among citizens, especially pregnant women and children through the formulation of dependable health policies and implementation plans. The National Orientation Agency (NOA) and the media are further expected to institute enlightenment strategies in this direction towards discouraging early marriages and teenage pregnancies in combating hunger and infant mortality.
The Get Involved scheme also requires the support of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and well-meaning citizens in enhancing the living conditions of every citizen. This, each one can do by ensuring that every child is in school; none goes to bed hungry and all can access health care and basic needs of life.
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1 Comments
To read that 1 in 7 Nigerian children die of malnutrition in Nigeria is an eye opener and national shame. While the actions of the first lady are highly commendable, this issue needs much more than a temporary fix. This needs serious grass roots level intervention at all levels of Government. How can we have let it come to this?? In my entire life only two Nigerians have ever stood out to me, one was the late Professor Ransome Kuti, who introduced ORT at the grass roots level and had a great impact on the health and mortality rates of infants, and the other, the late Dora Akinluyi of NAFDAC fame (when she moved into mainstream Government, it all went haywire). They both did this with no great fanfare or beating of drums of self praise. They just did their jobs to the best of their abilities, and achieved at least a good portion of their objectives.. They both engaged in grass root programmes that had very positive effects on the health of population, especially children. To have a statistic that says that 1 in every 7 children dies of malnutrition, especially in the rural areas, in a country where we have guinea corn, maize, vegetables, fruits, bush meat, tubers, fish, is unbelievable. Is it a breakdown of all networks (roads, health and health information, ignorance, transportation systems)in the rural areas, mass migration of youths to the urban areas, drought, war in the North east and degredation of the riverine areas, erosion in the east? We need to address the causes, while intervening at the grass roots levels. Plans like the one egg a day for every child in school are great, but we need to see that these plans are being implemented, and include those children who are not in school. Please Mr. President, the plight of Nigerian children is a grave one. These children are this country, and corruption should not be allowed to hijack their future.
We will review and take appropriate action.