ACC/SCN working groupThe annual UN ACC/SCN meeting was held in Nairobi, Kenya between 2-5 April 2001. The Working Group on nutrition in Emergencies meeting was held on the 5th. Highlights of the meeting are included below.As a follow up to the working group recommendations in 2000, a special meeting was organised and held during the SCN's 28th session in Nairobi in April 2001 (see summary of meeting on Assessment of Adult malnutrition, same page). Other follow-up initiatives reported on, and discussed at this years meeting were as follows:
Community therapeutic feeding is the treatment of severe malnutrition at home, using Ready to Use Therapeutic Food (RUTF), mother to mother support, follow-up of cases and a strong networking system. The RUTF provides the nutritional equivalent to Formula-100 and can be given to children with uncomplicated severe malnutrition (those with a good appetite, no persistent diarrhoea and no major medical complications) and to early discharges from local, small TFCs or local clinics, after initial complications and severe infections have been treated and appetite has returned. A principle underpinning CTC is the integration of emergency nutrition interventions with longer-term programmes by establishing community-based structures that can be re-activated in future emergencies. Although the need for, and strengths of, 'traditional' therapeutic feeding centres (TFC) are acknowledged (particularly for anorexic, hypothermic, hypoglycaemic, dehydrated and septicaemic cases), concerns regarding the related high costs, necessary resources and coverage of such feeding centres were presented. Potential negative impacts of TFCs, such as the removal of the mother from the family, the decrease in household economic production and the increase in public health problems due to cross infection were also highlighted. Research on CTC programmes is currently limited. Concern Worldwide and Oxfam have undertaken trials in Ethiopia in 2000. Dr. Steve Collins concluded his presentation by reinforcing the need for more 'imaginative' nutritional interventions during emergencies and the belief that the Community Based Therapeutic Care will add flexibility to current practice. Implementation must involve conscientious data collection to evaluate the overall impact.
Training, is considered one important and essential tool for capacity-building. While many training initiatives to date have generally been driven from agency head-quarters, there is a need and scope for institutionalising training capacity on a regional basis. The Africa Nutrition Capacity Development Initiative, which was presented at the SCN Working Group on Capacity Building meeting, provides one potential forum through which training initiatives can be channelled. The priorities of this regional initiative are; advocacy, client-focused training, action-oriented research, and promotion of regional collaborative responses and networking. There is potential for harmonising current training efforts through collaborative training initiatives. A number of initial actions for moving forward a comprehensive collaborative training initiative that would encompass a regional focus, may involve (i) preparing a central directory of training materials, (ii) determining the level and type of interest in such an initiative (iii) an initial meeting to discuss longer-term training strategies. Co-ordinating Mechanisms for the Working Group The Working Group on Nutrition in Emergencies will continue to receive support from both the RNIS Coordinator and the Emergency Nutrition Network (ENN) Coordinator. A task force made up of approximately 10 people will continue to lead the activities of the Working Group in 2001-2002. Thematic groups within the Working Group have been identified to spearhead specific areas of work: 1. Capacity Building, 2. RNIS Technical review 3. Infant feeding 4. Refugees 5. Assessment of adult malnutrition The next SCN symposium is on the topic of "Nutrition in the Context of Crisis and Conflict" and will be held during the SCN annual session in Berlin from 11-15 March 2002. The minutes of the meeting are accessible on the website at http://acc.unsystem.org/scn/Publications/AnnualMeeting/SCN28/28emergencies.htm. For further information or full minutes by email contact either Brian Jones at UN ACC Sub-Committee on Nutrition C/o World Health Organization, 20 Avenue Appia, CH 1211 Geneva 27, Switzerland. Telephone: +41-22-791 04 56 Fax: +41-22-798 88 91EMail: accscn@who.int or Fiona O'Reilly at ENN, Unit 2.5 The Tower, Trinity Enterprise Centre, Pearse Street Dublin 2 Ireland Telephone 353 1 6752390 Fax 353 1 6752391 Email fiona@ennonline.net 1 See 'Infant feeding in emergencies: new resources on nutrition in emergencies' Issue contents | ENN home |