Nursing Mothers Embrace Fight against Malnutrition, Anaemia
Somewhere in the small Lade Gore village, 64 km from
Garoua, chief town of Cameroon’s Far North region, Yvette Goulo sits on a small
stool between two huts with grass roofs. She and Maxime Vondou, her robust 2
and a half years son are surrounded by 11 nursing mothers fondling their babies
in their arms. Their babies are about 6 months old or younger.
Goulo tells them how vital it is to feed new born
babies exclusively with breast milk until they are 6months old. Vondou is her
fourth child and his older siblings are as healthy as he is.
It is on this basis that she was chosen to be a
member of support teams created to sensitise women in their communities on
proper child feeding and hygiene.
This, within the framework of an on-going
implementation of the pilot phase of a UNICEF programme against malnutrition
and anemia in children between the ages of 6 to 23 months and coupled with the promotion
of proper feeding for younger children.
The program is
known as the ‘Programme de Fortification
Almentaire a Domicile et de Promotion de l’Alimentation du Nourisson et du
Jeune Enfant’ in French.
Guiyasse Diane, one of the nursing mothers at the
sensitisation meeting with Goulo, tells The Guardian Post that she doesn’t miss
a chance to listen to her.
“This is my
first child and he is five months old. I want him to be as healthy as the
children of the Light Mother (the nickname given to exemplary mothers chosen to
sensitise others)
Like her son, 9000 other children of ages between
0-6 months have been targeted in four health districts; Pitoa, Bibeni, Golombe
and Ngong heath districts in the North and South regions.
Andre Temnga, Chief of the Bibemi Integrated Health
District says the implementation of the programme in his district is
satisfactory. “One good thing is that the communities are engaged, they have a
sense of belonging to the initiative.
They are sensitised by people in their community.”
Temnga says, just as it is done in other
participating districts, the target mothers or guardians are in regular contact
with support teams and action team members, otherwise known as community health
agents; and there is a cordial relation between them, he adds.
A total of 160 health agents and 1297 community health agents
have been trained so far to impart knowledge on nursing mothers in the target
districts.
Keyou Pascal, 26-year-old community health agent in
Bibemi tells The Guardian Post after a session with nursing mothers that “We
had a few problems at the beginning, but now everything is fine. Some of the
problems stemmed from the fact that some men did not want their women to attend
sensitisation meetings for undisclosed reasons; but we managed to convince
them.”
Keyou says he usually goes out to meet parents
accompanied by 33-year old Wadjalle. They both testify they were only able to
convince people in the community because they are known to be part of them.
Keyou says “We had cultures which forbade children
from consuming certain nutritive foods like eggs and fish and there was also a
misconception that the first breast milk of every woman who just put to birth
was poisonous and had to be milked and thrown away.
“Now women in our community call the first milk ‘the
baby’s vaccine’. Certain detrimental beliefs and cultural practices are being abandoned”
says Wadjelle. He also told The Guardian Post that this positive change
facilitated the acceptability of what they call “Five Star Pap”.
‘Five Star Pap’ is a feeding pattern UNICEF taught
women. It provides locally enriched soft food to children above 6months. It is a
mix of milled fish, groundnut, oil, fruit and millet.
A 2011
government survey showed 60% of children between the ages of 6 to 23 months in
Cameroon suffer from anemia while a third of the 122 of 1000
children who die in the country before their fifth birthday, die of
malnutrition related diseases.
Recent
findings show some 40%
of children in the North region suffer from chronic malnutrition or stunted
growth. 68.2 % of
children between six and nine month old suffer from anemia.
In a bid
to hastily turn the tide, UNICEF and the public health ministry, in July 2015,
began distributing micronutrients to mothers and guardians of children between
6 to 23 months to reinforce its home fortification and Vitamin A
supplementation program against malnutrition and anemia.
The home
fortification program involves, in addition to the Five Star Pap promotion, a
door-to-door distribution of packets of a food supplement branded VitaMin- a
mixture of vitamins A, B, E, C, B1, B2, B6, B12 (Vita) and Minerals such as iron, zinc,
selenium and other minerals (Min).
The free
distribution of the micronutrient powder which is added into cooked food was
later halted.
Beneficiary
mothers like Eliane Toudoukou of Langui Pionnier, says they were told the Pitoa
health district was out of stock.
Earlier
in January this year the distribution resumed. Toudoukou says her 17-month old
baby has grown healthier, adding two more kilograms to his weight.
After a tour of the Langui
Pionnier, Loppéré, Bounguéré, Langui Mofou, Wouro Bocko, Roumdé, Wafago, Wouro
Kari, and Laddé Goré areas in the Pitoa and Bibemi health districts, we observed
that the new word in every mouth is VitaMin.
Gouprou Rosaline says her daughter;
Garcia Haga is happier, stronger and has more appetite for food. “Even if the
health district runs out of free stock, I will not hesitate to buy the
micronutrients for my child if it is sold”.
Dougoula Angele, adding a sachet of
VitaMin into the Five Star Pap while her child looks on from a nearby mat, tells
The Guardian Post she is confortable enriching her child’s food with the
supplement because it is free of charge and more importantly because it was
prescribed by health officials.
The home fortifications program
targets 43,800 children in the North and South regions.
Bello Lougga, Nutritionist at the
North regional delegation for public health, says the aim of the community
driven UNICEF programme is to reduce the prevalence rate of acute malnutrition in
the regions by 10% by 2017.
Observers say the level of
success recorded so far in the implementation of the pilot phase of the
programme indicates that it would make sense for government and donors to begin
laying the groundwork for a nationwide implementation.
By Mbom Sixtus, in Garoua
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