MSF: Indications of Nutritional Crisis in Ethiopia’s Afar Region

We are witnessing alarming indications of a deadly and escalating nutritional crisis in Ethiopia’s Afar region, requiring an urgent scale up of the humanitarian response.

This year, the number of severely malnourished children admitted to our facility in Dupti Hospital has already exceeded the previous year’s baseline by a factor of three to four. Patient mortality rates are staggeringly high, exceeding 20 percent in some weeks. 35 children have died in the last eight weeks alone and more than two thirds of those patients died within 48 hours of admission. “Clearly, many people in Afar cannot access the very minimum levels of healthcare, food and water necessary to sustain human life. What scares us most at this point is that we are only beginning to see the very tip of the iceberg, and already it is overwhelming,” said Raphael Veicht, MSF Emergency Coordinator in Addis Ababa.

Dupti Hospital is the only functional referral hospital in all of Afar Region. Since April, MSF has been increasing its support to the hospital, which serves a population of more than 1.1 million people including hundreds of thousands of displaced people. More than 80 percent of malnourished children admitted for care here have had no previous access to healthcare before arriving to the referral hospital.

“To even begin to get control of this, a major scale of humanitarian assistance is urgently needed for displaced people and vulnerable host communities, with food security, primary healthcare, nutrition and water as key points of focus.” said Veicht. Damaged, destroyed, abandoned or under-resourced, it is reported that only 20 percent of health structures in Afar region are functional.

After MSF started its support for the 14-bed in-patient therapeutic feeding centre in Dupti Hospital this April, the ward was quickly overwhelmed with two or more patients per bed. Teams opened 14 additional beds in temporary structures, but these are also fully occupied and medical staff struggle to provide the level of care children need in this overcrowded facility. And recently, even the regular pediatric ward has become overwhelmed, with the number of patients exceeding beds by a factor of two or more. ​

“The site where we are staying is extremely harsh and uninhabitable,” said Asiya Salih Mohammed, who says many people from her community died in the conflict and that she was forced to travel by foot for over a month in search of safety. Now, she has arrived in a displaced persons site which lacks even the most basic provisions, including a medical centre, which is why she’s brought her one-year-old daughter to Dupti Hospital. “There is not enough food to eat, there is no drinking water, the house in which we are staying has no roof, so we have no shade and we’re exposed to the sun.”

The impact of those conditions is apparent among the patients in Dupti Hospital, where nearly two thirds of malnourished children requiring hospitalization come from displaced families, driving up admission rates.

“In two days alone, we saw 41 children admitted to the pediatric ward with severe stomach infections because people are forced to drink from muddy puddles,” said Veicht. ​ MSF has recently agreed with the Ethiopian Ministry of Health to increase the hospital’s pediatric, in-patient feeding and emergency department capacity, including with the rapid construction of new buildings and to support sanitation and the establishment of a reliable water source. In parallel, MSF plans to open five out-patient feeding programs in the most critically needed areas, but far more is needed to stave off a looming crisis.

Hundreds of thousands of people are struggling to survive not only in Afar but also other parts of Ethiopia. In Wardher, Somali region, rains have finally started, but people are still experiencing compounded challenges of food and water insecurity linked to an extended period of drought. MSF recently completed a measles vaccination campaign reaching more than 7,000 children in 50 different locations and has implemented medical surveillance to quickly react to emergency medical needs. Communities across the region warn of catastrophic drought, which is killing off livestock and other vital lifelines for survival, while water, food and access to healthcare are often out of reach.

Without an urgent upscale of the humanitarian response in Afar, many people already living through the horrors of conflict, displacement and drought will be further pushed towards the brink of survival. The humanitarian community must act with urgency.

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