Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Nutrition Program Needs Help....


Many of you remember my pre-twin years, when I was heavily involved in the motherless baby program. While I have been focused on Savannah and Nate for the last three years, these babies and their surrogate moms have been cared and provided for by Karen Masso, Jennifer Myhre and Stephanie Jillcott. The program has expanded and continues to grow serving not only motherless babies, but any child who is on the brink of survival. It is an amazing program and a real testament to Jesus' overwhelming love in this place. The word continues to spread about our program and the crazy "bazungu" who love children and are willing to help families provide food and medical care when things get desperate. There are many families that arrive after walking for several hours from Congo to recieve the help they need as well as many from within Bundibugyo district where we live. Unfortunately, even with some amazing generosity from multiple donors, our current funding is just not adequate to keep up with the needs of these tiny precious ones. As we look at the future and try to envision different sustainable programs that could meet the needs of these at risk children, we are confronted each month by a sea of faces that are literally starving and hungry for milk. How do we say no? The truth is we don't. We pray and hope that more support will come in to help us and we borrow money for the milk these babies desperately need. Below I have reposted a blog entry from one of our team leaders, Jennifer Myhre. It explains the situation with a bit more detail...




Well, the good news is that I did my first day of rounds on the new ward and it was so lovely. Instead of 20 patients crammed into a 10 bed ward the size of most people’s living rooms . . . They were dispersed over a 25 bed ward, each with their own bed, mattress, shelf, plenty of air, light, windows . . . Of course the fact that this motherless child has lost 2 kg since graduating at age 1 from the nutrition program and is back in desperate shape, this baby’s Kwashiorkor is related to AIDS and a severe case of malaria to boot, this mother’s family is telling me there is no one to help her, etc. does not change. The world is still a broken place, but now at least those who are suffering the most severe effects have a clean place to lay their heads. We even turned on the generator power to run an oxygen concentrator for a child who arrived gasping her last breaths . . . Blue and weak, she probably has a congenital heart defect, but the oxygen staved off death this hour at least. We could not have done that on the old ward. I’m grateful.The sad news is that the nutrition program is completely out of funding. We lost WFP food last year, and we were denied our UNICEF grant proposal this month. Stephanie rushed to get in another grant, but in the meantime Karen got milk on credit this week and we are struggling to feed about five seriously malnourished inpatient children as well as three premature babies.
I know that churches and Sunday school groups, student fellowships, etc. often look for a worthy cause. So I had the idea that if we got 12 groups to cover particular months (one takes August, another takes February) then we could manage another year while we try to work on the more sustainable aspects of the program (seeds, milking goats, an agriculture extension worker) that we’ve applied for grants to fund.




$1600 a month covers:Boxed Milk - $400 (Kwashiorkor and severe malnutrition)Formula - $400 (prematures and initial care for motherless)Breastfeeding Stipends - $400 (motherless)Peanut Butter Paste and Misc - $400 (mostly for HIV+kids)It’s a lot of money, but this budget helps about 50 kids/month at the cost of 1$/kid/day.




If anyone who reads this has a group that wants to commit to a month, let me know!

1 comment:

Unknown said...

I have really enjoyed reading your blog--I miss you both a lot--i will email you with great personal news! Love, Maya So happy that your little girl is doing much better.