Thursday, November 28, 2013

Why I Support The Global Fund



By Gina Olivieri, RESULTS' Grassroots Engagement Manager

Over the past few weeks, RESULTS grassroots volunteers all over Australia have been writing to their MPs and asking that Australia give $US 375 million to The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria for 2014-2016. Next week we will go to Canberra to meet with several MPs and Senators, sharing our vision of a world free of these deadly diseases, and our reasons for believing this should be a priority for Australia. In this blog post, I share my reasons for supporting The Global Fund.
  1. The 15 year old students I met in Umlazi who planted a vegetable garden at their school, so they could provide free, nutritious food to all the orphans at school.
  2. The boy of 15 I met on the south coast of KwaZulu-Natal who could not do his homework until 10pm, by candle light, because he had to take care of his younger brother, clean the house, and cook dinner first.
  3. The homeless girl of about 14 I saw sitting in the front seat of a tow truck, being leered at by the driver.
  4. The girl of about 13 with a piece of tape marked ‘134’ on her hand to indicate her place in the queue at a clinic in Umlazi.
A generation of orphans who have lost their parents to AIDS are vulnerable to exploitation, hunger and disadvantage. Child headed households abound, impacting on educational opportunities and putting girls especially at risk of HIV infection if they take an older boyfriend or ‘sugar daddy’ for financial security. Queues at HIV/AIDS clinics snake around the building and struggle to keep up with demand – despite the fact that many HIV+ people stay away for fear of stigmatisation.

What a lot of people don’t realise about The Global Fund is that it does much more than just pay for medicines. Grants from The Global Fund are used to strengthen, integrate and resource a variety of public health activities by government and non-government organisations to better educate the public about HIV risk, run support groups for HIV+ people, train community leaders, medical and support staff, and provide support for orphans and other vulnerable children, to name but a few.

These kids are my reason – what’s yours?


Tuesday, November 19, 2013

World Toilet Day 2013: #Igiveashit

http://worldtoiletday.org/


By Samantha Chivers, RESULTS Australia's Campaign Manager (Maternal, Child and Neonatal Health)
 
Today, November 19th, the world comes together to think about toilets. World Toilet Day is an event that brings together advocates, the United Nations and organisations working in the field to give attention to the fact that billions of people around the world go every day without basic toilets. Important in itself, this lack of water and sanitation is also essential to consider when talking about undernutrition.

The burden of undernutrition around the world is high, and a major deterrent to development and health. As an indicator of long-term poverty and inequality, stunting – or having a low height for your age – serves a grim picture: around one quarter of children under five in the world are stunted. In the least developed countries, this rate rises to thirty-seven percent.

Undernutrition carries such a large burden that its impacts can be seen today, as well as tomorrow. Globally, around seven million children under five die every year from mostly preventable diseases such as pneumonia and diarrhoea. Astonishingly, undernutrition is the underlying contributing factor in nearly half of these deaths.

Undernutrition is a major barrier to families and nations escaping poverty. Stunting is a huge public health problem not only because it leaves children more susceptible to infectious diseases, but also because stunted growth in the first months of a child’s life means stunted development of the brain and thus, of cognitive capacity. Permanently. It limits the ability of children to learn and earn, and develop into adults who can lead healthy and productive lives. By keeping adults out of work and limiting their opportunities, undernutrition has a huge impact on the social and economic development of families, and of countries.

While undernutrition can come about from many causes, one that may not be so obvious is the link between undernutrition and hygiene. Clean water, access to toilets, and hygiene practices such as exclusive breastfeeding and handwashing are incredibly important for preventing disease, and thus, for preventing undernutrition. It turns out that half of undernutrition is associated with intestinal parasitic infections and repeated diarrhoeal episodes. Diseases transmitted from water contaminated by sewage, including worms, intestinal parasites, and bacterial infections like environmental enteropathy and typhoid, actually play a very large role in undernutrition. Some diseases, like diarrhoea, literally flush nutrients from the body, as well as depleting stores while mounting an immune response. Others, such as environmental enteropathy, cause an infection that damages the wall of the small intestine and limits the ability to absorb nutrients, slowly causing stunting. Contracting these infections from poor hygiene, defecating in the open, or not having access to clean water, is a strong contributing factor to being undernourished despite what you eat.

This year, RESULTS Australia is marking World Toilet Day. Our nutrition and child health campaigns focus on implementing interventions that are based on what works. The United Nations estimates that there are 2.5 billion people who still do not use an improved sanitation facility and a little over 1 billion practising open defecation. As a single gram of poo can contain 10 million viruses, one million bacteria and 1,000 parasite cysts, open defecation can cause serious infection and raise the prevalence of undernutrition. Working to integrate nutrition interventions with increased access to toilets and clean water and using basic hygiene practices such as handwashing, can have a major reduction in child undernutrition. It’s as simple, and as complicated, as that. So if you “give a shit” about child undernutrition, please appreciate the clean water that comes straight out of the tap the next time you wash your hands, and join us to learn how you can make a difference on this important issue.

@RESULTS_AU
@World Toilet Day
#WTD
#Igiveashit


Thursday, November 7, 2013

Nutrition, Food Security and RESULTS


Samantha Chivers, Global Health Campaign Manager RESULTS Australia, on World Food Day

Hunger remains a persistent problem in the world. Around seven million children around the world die before their fifth birthday every year, mainly from preventable and treatable diseases such as diarrhoea, pneumonia and malaria. Shockingly, around half of these deaths are directly linked to undernutrition. While around one in four children are too short for their age worldwide, this rises to one in two in some countries in our region, such as East Timor, India and Cambodia.

On October 16th the United Nations hosted World Food Day, whose theme was Sustainable Food Systems for Food Security and Nutrition. Food security – or all people at all times having access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food – is an increasingly important issue for Australia, and for the Asia – Pacific region. Engaging with food systems to make them more equitable and diverse is especially important at this point in time. Worldwide, more than one billion people are undernourished, and the world will need to produce 50 percent more food by 2050 to feed a projected population of 9 billion people. 

In honour of World Food Day, I represented RESULTS Australia at the FAO World Food Day event hosted by the Sydney Food Fairness Alliance. Speaking at the event was Ronnie Kahn, founder of OzHarvest, nutritionist Rosemary Stanton OAM, and gardener Costa Georgiadis, in addition to a multitude of community organisations profiling their work in their own communities. Being relatively new to RESULTS it was inspiring to see members of the community come together to work on food security and nutrition in their local area, and especially to involve those who may be left out of traditional systems, such as new migrants and adolescents out of school. It also reminded me that connection with your community, be it local, regional, or global, be it based on geography, shared values or ideals, is the only way to make a sustainable difference. A small community of like-minded individuals can have a huge impact, through actions and through advocacy.

RESULTS Australia is working to build a network of the organisations working in the nutrition and food security fields. We are encouraging the Department of Foreign Affairs to pick up where the late AusAID left off, and continue to develop their first strategy dealing with child undernutrition in a holistic manner. To quote Senator Brett Mason, the new Parliamentary Secretary for Foreign Affairs "Australia is helping to fight hunger, improve nutrition and increase food production by working with communities to make farmland more productive, create better markets, and improve the health of mothers and babies". Nutrition is an issue that is a forgotten priority in our aid program. One in eight people around the world suffer from chronic hunger, and this will only increase unless we act.

Samantha Chivers, Global Health Campaign Manager, RESULTS Australia

With thanks to the Sydney Food Fairness Alliance and the Macarthur Future Food Forum for hosting RESULTS Australia.

Sources and Further Reading
http://progressreport.apromiserenewed.org/

http://www.savethechildren.org.uk/resources/online-library/life-free-hunger-tackling-child-malnutrition


http://www.irinnews.org/report/92039/timor-leste-chronic-malnutrition-among-world-s-highest

www.fao.org/getinvolved/WorldfoodDay/en/

http://blogs.worldbank.org/voices/world-food-day-challenge-feeding-more-people-fewer-resources

http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/01/17747135/implementing-agriculture-development-world-bank-group-agriculture-action-plan-2013-2015

http://sydneyfoodfairness.org.au/blog/2013/09/25/fao-world-food-day-2013-october-16/

http://ministers.dfat.gov.au/mason/releases/2013/bm_mr_131016.html

http://www.ozharvest.org/ourimpact.asp?pageID=609

http://www.fao.org/docrep/018/i3458e/i3458e.pdf

http://sydneyfoodfairness.org.au/

http://www.sectorconnect.org.au/macarthurfuturefoodform