
I took interest this week in the country of Yemen
and its poverty on children. I found a
great report on the reality of poverty in Yemen on the UNICEF website,
UNICEF.org. As this is a country that
UNICEF contributes to in many ways in attempts to reduce the poverty rate
amongst children and families. UNICEF
also intervenes in many ways to help increase awareness and support the
decrease of malnutrition due to poverty.
UNICEF describes poverty as a “multiple phenomenon measured in many ways”
(UNICEF). The odds of a child receiving a
second chance from poverty is very rare to slim. Thereforth the child will have a life in
poverty throughout adulthood as well. Many
problems are formed from poverty as a child; physical, mental, emotional, and
more. When we reflect to the country of
Yemen, whom is in a world of devastation and chaos due to war. War creating many families to suffer from
devastation, losing everything they own, half of the population suffer food insecure
amounts of food, no functioning healthcare system, and having to flee their
homes. 2.2 million children are acutely malnourished,
and 1.7 million children are acutely malnourished needing urgent care. In 2016 UNICEF treated 215,000 children
suffering from serve acute malnutrition and 4 million plus children age 5 received
vitamin supplements. Today there are
462,000 children suffering from severe acute malnutrition. Packages have been delivered over the last
few years to the citizens of the country, nutrition specific. The magnitude of this problem is growing with
the violence and devastation continuing in the middle east, it is truly
overwhelming. The reality as shared in
the report is that if a difference is not made, a cycle of poverty and under development. Al Sabayecn Hospital works on screening children
suffering from malnutrition, treating those that are severe. There are many obstacles that Yemen and these
hospitals face on tackling the epidemic of malnourishment, resulting from poverty
throughout the country. These obstacles for
hospitals can range from the need for medication, the need for
man-power(doctors/nurses/ect), functioning health facilities and the access to
them. The greatest piece that needs to occur
in order for not only the people to survive, but the country itself, is the war
to stop. That indeed is another beast in
itself. The reality is that the country
and its people are suffering. The
children, whom are the future generation suffer from malnourishment, resulting
in many developmental concerns. (UNICEF). How are they to flourish in the future under
these situations?
Examples of children suffering
in that country are the medical history of the following two children, one only
being 5 months-old and the other 2 years-old.
Abdulmalik, the 5 month-old was brought to the hospital due to the child
being non-responsive. The infant at 3
months-old only weighted just over 2 kilograms.
After hospital stay of 2 months the infant’s weight was up to 3.2 kilograms. The ideal weight for a child of this age is 6
kilograms, almost over half the weight this child in Yemen is. The child was suffering for malnourishment,
due to the gross degree of poverty in the country. Another child, the 2-year-old, suffering from
his body being swollen and barely able to lift head up due to weakens. He was diagnosis with dehydration and
malnutrition. Abdo was admitted into the
hospital to recover. When the child
reached 50% improvement the parents checked him out and returned home with
him. This is an issue added to the
concern of malnutrition that is commonly seen throughout the hospitals. Due to the impact of poverty many families
cannot afford to travel away from home or their job, regardless of time
duration. The lack of functioning
healthcare system and hospitals, the access to healthcare is rare or a far
distance. Many families do not have the
funds to transport back and forth to the hospitals. A vicious cycle that seems to be stuck on
repeat. A change has to occur for these
children to thrive, for this country to thrive.
UNICEF is intervening as much as they are able based on the funds received
and volunteers. (Madhok & Erman, 2017).
I have to say I am a bit ashamed
of the information I gathered from this site.
I was aware poverty existed in our world and indeed was a global
problem. I by far realized the severity
of it in countries of war. I recall my
grandmother sharing her stories of the cold war, but I never experienced any
thus far to say. War has to be the worst
of all evils, leaving a path of devastation of unsorts. We, as Americans whom have access to many luxuries
should reconsider how we spend money, spend our time, waste, or even ignore the
problems surrounding us. Poverty is
indeed real, and we must stand up and make a difference. Whether one donates money, time, or their
voice, something needs to create a reform for humanity. In 2017 UNICEF still needed 236.6 million for
emergency response in Yemen, which includes nutrition for mothers and children
at 83.5 million. There is so much more that
continues to grow daily. We all must
begin today making a difference, an impact globally.
Reference
Madhok, R., & Erman,
Al S., (2017, February 14). In Yemen, conflict & poverty exacerbate child malnutrition. Retrieved from https://unicef.rg/infobycountry/yemen_94543.html
Hello Leslie,
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your blog. When i read your blog i didn't know how extreme poverty was in different countries. I wish i had a way to end poverty for good. Thank you for open my eyes on things I didn't know.
Thank you for sharing with us this week! While UNICEF is as name that I am familiar with, I have never taken the time to formally research the organization. I really enjoyed how you placed focus on one particular country in crisis. It is very overwhelming to think about how many millions of people are suffering in the world. It makes our own problems and difficulties seem so small!!
ReplyDeleteWao! It is overwhelming to read all the suffering of people of Yemen due to the war. The story you shared about the two boys is repeated in hundreds of children. The situations of the people of Yemen is very unfair. Due to war, the devastation is almost unrecoverable because of their religious and political conflicts!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing that information!
Reading this was indeed heartbreaking, but it needed to be shared so that more people understand the harsh realities of the world. Thank you for sharing this post.
ReplyDeleteThe crisis in Yemen is overwhelming and devastating. I am grateful that UNICEF UNICEF contributes to in many ways in attempts to reduce the poverty rate among children and families.
ReplyDelete