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picture1_Acute Malnutrition Pdf 140748 | Ipc Chad Acute Malnutrition 2021oct2022sept Snapshot English


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File: Acute Malnutrition Pdf 140748 | Ipc Chad Acute Malnutrition 2021oct2022sept Snapshot English
chad acute malnutrition snapshot october 2021 september 2022 acute malnutrition october 2021 september 2022 current acute malnutrition october december 2021 1 67m 0 25m the overall confidence level of the ...

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       CHAD: Acute Malnutrition Snapshot | October 2021 - September 2022
       Acute Malnutrition October 2021 - September 2022                                                                                                Current Acute Malnutrition |  October - December 2021
                        1.67M                                                                                         0.25M                                                                                                                                       The overall confidence 
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  level  of  the  analysis 
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  was  acceptable  (*)  to 
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  high (***).
       The number of 6-59 months                                                            Pregnant or lactating women 
       children acutely malnourished                                                        acutely malnourished
       IN NEED OF TREATMENT                                                                 IN NEED OF TREATMENT 
         Children in Severe Acute Malnutrition (SAM)                                                                    335,000
         Children in Moderate Acute Malnutrition (MAM)                                                              1,334,000
         Global Acute Malnutrition (GAM) of children                                                                1,668,000
       Overview
       In 2022, it is estimated that around 1.67 million children under the age of 
       five will suffer from acute malnutrition, including around 335,000 severe 
       cases in the areas analysed. For the purposes of the analysis, a total of five 
       provinces and 52 departments in Chad were analysed. 
       Between October and December 2021, a slight decrease in cases of acute 
       malnutrition is estimated when compared with the last IPC analysis for the 
       same period in 2020, with two provinces and 16 departments classified as 
       Serious (IPC Phase 3) as well as two provinces and 11 departments classified 
       as Critical (IPC Phase 4).  
       This precarious nutritional situation is the result of a combination of several 
       aggravating factors, such as inadequate food intake, poor infant and young 
       child feeding practices, a high prevalence of childhood diseases, lack of 
       access to healthcare, an increase in the frequency of measles outbreaks, low 
       measles vaccination coverage, low vitamin A supplementation coverage, 
       poor hygiene conditions, low coverage of access to drinking water, and 
       low coverage of nutritional and health interventions.  Other  contributing 
       factors include ongoing conflict and insecurity, acute food insecurity 
       in some provinces, and the consequences of climate change (flooding, 
       drought, poor rainfall distribution).
       During the first projection period between January and May 2022, the 
       nutritional situation will likely not improve.  Even though food availability 
       remains acceptable in most provinces, several factors unrelated to food 
       security outlined above continue to act as drivers of acute malnutrition.   
       During this period, three provinces and 17 departments are projected to be 
       in a Serious situation (IPC Phase 3) and two provinces and 12 departments 
       are projected to be in a Critical situation (IPC Phase 4). For the second                                                                      1st projection | Jan - May 2022                                                      2nd Projection | June - Sept 2022
       projection period from June to September 2022, which corresponds to 
       the peak period for malnutrition, a marked deterioration in the nutritional 
       situation is expected, with two provinces and 17 departments projected to 
       be in a Serious situation and three provinces and 12 departments in a Critical 
       situation. The severity of the nutritional situation during this period is likely 
       to be similar to that observed in 2020, except for the slight improvement in 
       the Lac province.
       In order to mitigate the consequences of this critical nutritional situation, 
       urgent and coordinated actions are necessary. 
           Trend Analysis 2019 - 2022
                                             Children in severe acute malnutrition (SAM) 
                                             Children in moderate acute malnutrition (MAM)
                                             Pregnant or lactating women in  acute malnutrition
         Aug 2019-
         May 2020
          Oct 2020-
          Sept 2021
          Oct 2021-
          Sept 2022
              #of children           500,000            1,000,000         1,500,000         2,000,000
      Key Drivers                                                                                                      Recommended Actions
                         Inadequate food consumption
                         Inadequate quality and quantity of food intake prevents 
                         children from getting the minimum adequate food needed 
                         for physical growth. Poor infant and young child feeding 
                         (IYCF) practices also contribute to this.                                                     Provide                              Take actions for                      Promote good                             Increase access to safe                              Monitor risk factors
                         Low accessibility to quality health services                                                  humanitarian                         early prevention                      caring and feeding                       water and adequate                                   Monitor prevalence of disease, 
                         Low accessibility to quality health services and high                                         assistance                           Strengthen measles                    practices                                sanitation                                           vaccine coverage, the evolution of 
                         prevalence of childhood diseases (malaria, diarrhea, acute                                    As a first priority, deliver         vaccination coverage                  Strengthen the                           Improve food utilisation and                         the COVID-19 pandemic, coverage 
                         respiratory infections), with an increase in the frequency of                                 treatment for all children           and vitamin A                         implementation of                        its impact on nutrition by                           of preventative and curative care, 
                         measles outbreaks, as well as low coverage of safe water                                      under five and pregnant              supplementation.                      community activities to                  facilitating people’s access to safe                 functioning of basic services due 
                         and inadequate sanitation conditions drive the situation.                                     and lactating women                  Ensure access to                      promote good infant                      water sources, while intensifying                    to insecurity, household food 
                         Insecurity and conflict                                                                       suffering from acute                 quality health care for               and young child feeding                  hygiene and sanitation                               security and the effects of climate 
                                                                                                                       malnutrition to reduce               vulnerable populations                practices.                               awareness and services,                              change (flooding and drought). In 
                         Residual insecurity in some areas and inter-communal                                          the infant and maternal              and strengthen the                                                             especially among households in                       addition, initiate an early warning 
                         conflicts lead to population movements, which                                                 mortality rate.                      overall health system.                                                         hard-to-reach areas.                                 system within the existing nutrition 
                         negatively affects delivery of basic social services.                                                                                                                                                                                                                  surveillance system in Chad.
          Publication date: December 2021 | *IPC population data is based on population estimate by the National 
          Statistics Office in Chad.  | Feedback: IPC@FAO.org | Disclaimer: The information shown on this map does not 
          imply official recognition or endorsement of any physical and political boundaries. 
          This analysis was conducted under the sponsorship of the Directorate of Nutrition and Food Technology 
          (Ministry of Public Health). It benefited from the financial support of WFP and technical support of UNICEF.
          Classification of food insecurity and malnutrition using the IPC protocols, developed and implemented by 
          the IPC Global Partnership - Action Against Hunger, CARE, CILSS, EC-JRC, FAO, FEWSNET, Food Security Cluster, 
          Malnutrition Cluster, IGAD, Oxfam, PROGRESAN-SICA, SADC, Save the Children, UNICEF and WFP.
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...Chad acute malnutrition snapshot october september current december m the overall confidence level of analysis was acceptable to high number months pregnant or lactating women children acutely malnourished in need treatment severe sam moderate mam global gam overview it is estimated that around million under age five will suffer from including cases areas analysed for purposes a total provinces and departments were between slight decrease when compared with last ipc same period two classified as serious phase well critical this precarious nutritional situation result combination several aggravating factors such inadequate food intake poor infant young child feeding practices prevalence childhood diseases lack access healthcare an increase frequency measles outbreaks low vaccination coverage vitamin supplementation hygiene conditions drinking water health interventions other contributing include ongoing conflict insecurity some consequences climate change flooding drought rainfall distr...

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