INA- sources
A rapid nutrition and mortality assessment carried out by MSF reveals that a catastrophic situation has unfolded in Zamzam camp, North Darfur, since the conflict in Sudan began in April 2023.
All emergency thresholds for malnutrition have been reached and MSF is calling for an immediate, coordinated and rapid scale-up of the humanitarian response in order to save lives.
The action of UN agencies and international NGOs – who have maintained only a limited presence in North Darfur since they evacuated in April – is vital for achieving this. Food and cash distributions are urgently required. Healthcare and water and sanitation provision are also vital.
Almost a quarter of children screened during the assessment were found to be acutely malnourished, with seven per cent having severe acute malnutrition (SAM). Among children aged six months to two years old, the figures were even more stark with nearly 40 per cent of this age group malnourished – 15 per cent with SAM.
The emergency threshold for malnutrition, which indicates that urgent action must be taken, is two per cent – making it clear that a serious emergency situation is present in Zamzam camp.
The total number of deaths in the camp per day was also cause for extreme alarm, with a crude mortality rate of 2.5 per 10,000 people per day – more than double the emergency threshold. Forty per cent of pregnant and breastfeeding women were also found to be malnourished – another indicator of the intense severity of the situation.
To prevent further imminent loss of life and to reduce the scale of suffering, MSF will rapidly increase our response in the camp to provide treatment for children in the most critical condition. However, the scale of the disaster requires a far greater response than we can provide alone.
“What we are seeing in Zamzam camp is an absolutely catastrophic situation,” says Claire Nicolet, head of MSF’s emergency response in Sudan. “We estimate that at least one child is dying every two hours in the camp.
“Our current estimate is that there are around 13 child deaths each day. Those with severe malnutrition who have not yet died are at high risk of dying within three to six weeks if they do not get treatment. Their condition is treatable if they can get to a health facility. But many cannot,” says Nicolet.
MSF is the only operational health provider in Zamzam camp – one of the largest and oldest camps for displaced people in Sudan. Our small clinic is overwhelmed by the high number of patients and the severity of their clinical condition.
Over the past nine months, North Darfur’s already fragile health system – and the entire humanitarian response – has collapsed, and the clinic is one of the few outpatient health centres in North Darfur that is fully functional.
People travel by donkey or on foot from villages up to 50 kilometres away from the camp in order to get access to healthcare, camping outside the clinic overnight because this is their only chance of getting treatment for their children.
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