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Treating hunger in Haiti with food,
one child at a time
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Serving lunch at a school canteen in Haiti |
For years, parents in central Haiti faced a terrible choice.They could send
their children to school with empty stomachs, in the hope that they might gain
the skills to someday escape poverty. Or they could keep them at home to work
in the family gardens, to help produce much-needed food for right now.
No longer. Thanks to the dedicated efforts of Zanmi Lasante’s child
nutrition program, more than 17,000 children at 28 schools in central Haiti
receive piping hot lunches every day—free of charge. Local cooks employed
by the program prepare the nourishing meals from hundreds of giant sacks of
rice and beans, distributed regularly by Zanmi Lasante (ZL) as part of the
expanding struggle to eradicate child malnutrition from Haiti’s impoverished
Central Plateau.
The broad smiles of the children are mirrored by their teachers, who know
the tremendous impact this program has had on their schools. Now that parents
no longer have to choose between education or food for their children, school
attendance has increased significantly. And so have the attention spans and
classroom performance of the children once they get to school.
“Before the lunch program started, many of my students would come to
school hungry or wouldn't come at all,” recalls one teacher. “Since
we began giving daily meals, they hardly ever miss a day and their academic
performance has improved dramatically.”
"The program is one of the cornerstones of our commitment to social support
in the Central Plateau,” notes PIH’s Food Assistance Coordinator
Elisabeth Berger. “Its strength is that it takes a proactive community-based
approach to preventing child malnutrition, ensuring that children won’t
have to come into our clinics as patients."
Mounting a community-based drive to eradicate hunger
The school lunch program is just one component of ZL’s comprehensive,
community-based approach to eradicating hunger in the Central Plateau. In
towns and villages throughout the area, community health workers and clinicians
from Zanmi Lasante teach families to recognize warning signs and seek out children
with telltale symptoms.
Throughout Haiti, hunger and malnutrition cripple and destroy the lives of
poor people—especially children—at an astonishing rate. Nearly
half of all Haitians are undernourished. A recent study by ZL found that
92 percent of families living in Haiti’s Central Plateau suffer from
extreme food insecurity. And close to 50 percent of families in this
area must feed their families on an income of less than 500 Haitian gourdes a
month—just $12.50.
Chronic malnutrition weakens the body’s resistance to disease, leading
to a downward spiral of sickness and poverty for parents and their children
that too often ends in early death. In young children, whose bodies are still
developing, chronic malnutrition stunts physical and intellectual development,
causing irreversible harm that may follow a child through life.
When ZL health workers encounter a child suffering from malnutrition, they
refer the child’s family to the nearest ZL clinical site. There,
malnourished children receive high-energy therapeutic feeding formulas until
they regain a healthy weight.
The family is also paired with a community agronomist who visits their home
regularly, providing advice and assistance for improving their home garden. This
comprehensive support is vital to addressing the conditions of poverty and
food insecurity that first caused the child to become malnourished.
Agricultural projects help improve nutrition and incomes
Agricultural projects are increasingly important to ZL’s battle against
hunger in the Central Plateau. Beginning in November 2006, ZL started
local production of its own high-energy therapeutic foods for children
hospitalized with severe malnutrition.
Through an innovative collaboration with a team of Haitian agronomists, the
main ingredients for the therapeutic foods—peanuts, corn, rice, and beans—are
grown for ZL’s child nutrition program at a nearby farm. Vitamins and
minerals are then added and the foods are processed into fortified
peanut butter and akamil, a high-protein porridge.
These locally-produced therapeutic foods provide the energy, protein and vitamins
found in more expensive commercial brands—at a fraction of the cost.
By growing and processing the food locally, ZL bolsters the local economy while
also demonstrating the value of local resources in supporting community health.
ZL’s efforts to produce therapeutic foods locally were inspired and
assisted by Meds and Food for
Kids (MFK), a non-governmental organization
working in northern Haiti that has developed a “ready to use therapeutic
food” called Medika Manba © -- a fortified peanut-butter therapy.
A successful pilot program with Medika Manba at two Zl sites confirmed findings
from studies in Africa that showed this kind of treatment to be highly effective
for child malnutrition. With technical assistance from MFK, ZL then began growing
peanuts and preparing our own version of fortified peanut butter.
In the first two months of distribution, more than 30 children recovered from
severe malnutrition with ZL’s locally produced therapeutic foods. In
2007, ZL will scale up its production to supply more than 2,000 children in
need of nutritional support.
Expanding food production at the ZL farm will offer yet another opportunity
to improve food security in the Central Plateau. In partnership with Zanmi
Agrikol, the team of Haitian agronomists who manage the farm, the land
will serve both to produce nutritious food and to provide hands-on training
for local farmers in techniques that can improve crop yields.
These trained farmers will serve as ajan agrikol, or community agronomists,
visiting malnourished children in their homes and working with their families
to improve their gardens.
Contending with unfair trade policies
Although training local farmers and providing emergency food support can help
alleviate hunger in Haiti, many of the greatest causes of persistent food insecurity
lie outside the country’s borders. As recently as the mid-1980s, Haiti
was self-sufficient in production of rice, the staple food. But trade
agreements that opened Haiti’s markets to imported rice—mainly
from the US—have progressively weakened the position of small-scale Haitian
farmers.
In 1995, under pressure from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Haiti
was forced to reduce its tariffs on US-grown rice from 35 percent to 3 percent,
far below the regional Caribbean average of 25 percent. At the same time, corporate
US rice producers continue to benefit from farm subsidies averaging $1 billion
a year and rely on heavily subsidized water to grow a wetland crop in parts
of California that would be a desert without irrigation. As a result, US producers
can afford to export rice at prices below their real costs of production, making
it almost impossible for small farmers in countries like Haiti to compete without
some form of protection. From 1994 to 1995, the amount of rice Haiti imported
from the US more than doubled.
Though the influx of cheap US rice helped lower food prices in the short term,
it decimated Haiti’s agricultural sector. Most of the money spent on
imported US rice has not stayed in Haiti, but instead gone to US rice growers—draining
the Haitian economy.
Haiti has closely followed the prescriptions of the international finance
community for over a decade, earning the ranking of “least trade restrictive” country
in the Caribbean by the IMF. Yet Haiti remains the poorest country with the
hungriest population in the western hemisphere.
While working to provide food for hungry people, Zanmi Lasante continues to
call for the end of unjust agricultural and trade policies imposed upon Haiti
by international financial institutions, so that children in Haiti may attend
school without worrying where they will find their next meal.
[posted December 2006] |