The "Hungry Season"
In Malawi, October marks the
beginning of a hungry season that can extend all the way
until April. Most of the rural population practices subsistence
farming, which often leaves people in a difficult and vulnerable
situation. When the harvest comes in, maybe around April, families have
food surpluses. They sell the majority of this food to acquire cash and keep
the rest of the food to feed their families.
When October rolls around,
however, families often start to run low on food. When they go to the market to
purchase more food, they often find that most of the food from the past year's
harvest has already been consumed by other families. They must then wait for
the next harvest and suffer in the meantime, and this period of waiting is
known as the "hungry season." The number of malnourished children we
see at our Project Peanut Butter mobile clinics in Malawi rises
dramatically during this time period.
How does Project Peanut Butter Help?
Chikwawa
District in southwestern Malawi, where the climate is extremely hot, is among
the nation's hardest-hit districts in terms of food insecurity and
malnutrition. Project Peanut Butter operates four mobile clinics in this
district, the largest of which is based at Mitondo Health Center. Mothers who
attend this clinic come from perhaps 10-15 different surrounding villages,
sometimes walking for hours with their sick children.
Project Peanut
Butter nurses and volunteers visit Mitondo Health Clinic every two weeks
and assess the children who come there, sometimes seeing between 60
and 100 children at the clinic during the hungry season.
Hear Their Stories
Twenty-five year old Luvanes, who walked twenty minutes from
her village of Savala to Mitondo Health Center today, is the mother of four
girls. She was concerned about the health of her youngest daughter, 1
½-year-old Thokozani. And rightfully so, for Thokozani was diagnosed with
moderate malnutrition and given enough supplemental food to last until the next
clinic visit, two weeks from today. Nurse Eleanor will counsel Luvanes about
her child’s ailment and demonstrate how she needs to feed her child every day.
Cecilia, from the nearby Nasi
Village, is also the proud mother of four girls. Her husband ferries
people across a river in his canoe for a living, and the family also grows
maize to earn income. Today she has come to Mitondo Health Center with her
youngest daughter, 9-month-old Mudzandifuna, to attend an "Under
5 Clinic." Some of the Health Surveillance Aides employed by Project
Peanut Butter spotted her and informed her that her child's weight has
been steadily decreasing. They referred her to PPB's mobile clinic to be
assessed and treated for malnutrition. After her weight, height, and mid-upper
arm circumference (MUAC) were taken, Mudzandifuna was diagnosed with severe
acute malnutrition and started on a 4 to 8 week regimen of Ready-to-Use
Therapeutic Food (RUTF) and antibiotics. Cecilia stated that she appreciates
Project Peanut Butter because she knows that other children who are on this
treatment improve quickly.
You can help malnourished children like Thokozani and Mudzandifuna make a full recovery by donating to this fundraiser. We aim to raise enough money to fund all of the operations of our largest clinic in Chikwawa, the Mitondo clinic, during the 2013-2014 hungry season.What YOUR Donations Will Go Towards!
1.
Food for Moderately Malnourished Children- $1, 920
-Children who are considered moderately rather than severely malnourished receive a different food
2. Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Food (RUTF)- $2,400
-We budget $200 each day for RUTF, and there will be 12 clinic days during hungry season
3. Gasoline for Project Vehicles- $1,200
-We budget $100 per day for transportation, and there will be 12 clinic days during hungry season
4. Nurse and Driver Salary-$912
-To pay those who make our work possible at Mitondo Clinic
5. Health Surveillance Aide and Volunteer Pay-$2,268
-HSAs and volunteers identify sick children in the community
Thank you for your generous donation!
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