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UNICEF Protects Sudan's Children From Malaria, Cholera As Cases Rise

UNICEF Protects Sudan's Children From Malaria, Cholera As Cases Rise

Forbes2 days ago

For children caught in Sudan's brutal conflict, one of the many devastating impacts is a heightened risk of contracting a preventable disease like malaria or cholera. Donor support is needed to help UNICEF reach the sick with lifesaving treatment, contain the outbreaks and strengthen long-term prevention.
In the Arabee neighborhood of Damazine, Blue Nile state, Sudan, girls sit under a bed net provided by UNICEF to prevent malaria, a mosquito-borne illness. UNICEF and partners are distributing bed nets and other emergency supplies to contain the spread of malaria and other infectious diseases that have surged as the Sudan conflict continues.
As displaced families struggle to access safe water, nutrition and health care, cases of malaria and cholera keep rising. Both infectious diseases are preventable and treatable, but conditions on the ground are fueling these outbreaks.
UNICEF is working with partners to strengthen prevention and treat the sick, delivering lifesaving supplies and other support to health workers and facilities. But with recent funding cuts, more donor support is needed.
Malaria remains one of the three leading causes of death among young children worldwide, after pneumonia and diarrhea. The disease, relatively rare in temperate climates and common in tropical and subtropical areas, is caused by a parasite and spread to humans through the bites of infected mosquitoes. Symptoms include high fever and chills. Young children in Africa represent the vast majority of malaria-related deaths.
To combat rising cases in Sudan, UNICEF is rushing anti-malarial bed nets to shield families from mosquito bites, providing testing kits and medicines to ensure early diagnosis and timely treatment, and vaccinating children under age 2.
Mohammed 12, carries anti-malarial bed nets received from a UNICEF supply distribution center in Arabee village in Damazine, Blue Nile state, Sudan on May 30, 2025.
Cholera cases are also rapidly rising in Sudan as access to safe water and basic sanitation is disrupted or outright depleted, as it tends to be in conflict-affected areas.
Contracted by ingesting food or water contaminated with the bacterium Vibrio cholerae, cholera can easily spread in crowded camps. Severe cases can cause acute watery diarrhea. It is treatable with oral rehydration solution and antibiotics, but severe cases — which typically cause acute watery diarrhea leading to severe dehydration — can be fatal, especially for a malnourished child with an already weakened immune system.
Sudan isn't the only country dealing with cholera; outbreaks have become increasingly common across Africa. UNICEF is working with governments and local and community-based partners in many high-risk countries to strengthen prevention and build resilience to future outbreaks through better monitoring, surveillance and response mechanisms, social behavior change, water and sanitation system upgrades and other solutions.
Cholera can be prevented with regular handwashing with soap and maintaining separate water and sanitation facilities. Community health and other frontline workers can further support prevention by promoting best hygiene practices.
A mother who was displaced from Al Jazirah and is staying at a displacement camp in Kassala state receives a dignity kit from UNICEF. The kit includes supplies to meet basic water and sanitation needs: a bucket and jerrycan, soap, laundry detergent, menstrual hygiene products and more. As conflict in Sudan continues, UNICEF together with partners remain on the ground, delivering lifesaving supplies and services in conflict hotspots, providing urgent support to displaced and host communities, and building resilience through support to essential service delivery across the country.
In Sudan, tackling cholera is another integral part of UNICEF's emergency response to the country's ongoing conflict and related crises affecting children and families. More than 7,700 cholera cases, including over 1,000 cases in children under age 5, and 185 associated deaths have been reported in Khartoum state since January 2025, according to health authorities.
Since the beginning of the brutal conflict, more than 3 million people have been forced to flee their homes in Khartoum state and the violence has upended the lives of millions more. With large parts of the state becoming more accessible, families have started to return to their homes, finding them damaged and critical water and sanitation services largely unavailable.
More than 1 million children are estimated to live in the affected localities across Khartoum state.
On Jan. 18, 2025, a UNICEF volunteer checks the quality of water at a camp in Kassala state sheltering thousands of families displaced by fighting in Al Jazirah, in eastern Sudan. Providing clean, safe water and constructing sanitation facilities are critical for preventing waterborne diseases such as cholera. These interventions remain integral to UNICEF's emergency response with partners as Sudan's conflict continues.
Continuous attacks on power plants in Khartoum state over the past month have disrupted electricity supply and worsened water shortages, significantly impacting access to safe and clean water. This has forced many families to collect water from unsafe and contaminated sources, increasing the risk of cholera and other deadly waterborne diseases, especially in overcrowded neighborhoods and displacement sites.
Reported cholera cases have surged significantly from 90 per day to 815 per day between May 15 and 25, a nine-fold increase over just 10 days. Meanwhile, there are tens of thousands of children with severe acute malnutrition (SAM) in Jebel Aulia and Khartoum localities, where famine looms, heightening their risks should they fall ill.
"We are racing against time with our partners to provide basic health care, clean water and good nutrition, among other lifesaving services, to children who are highly vulnerable to deadly diseases and severe acute malnutrition,' said Sheldon Yett, UNICEF Representative for Sudan.
'Each day, more children are exposed to this double threat of cholera and malnutrition, but both are preventable and treatable, if we can reach children in time."
UNICEF and partners continue to work with Sudan's Federal Ministry of Health to curb the spread of the deadly disease and save lives. A multipronged response is underway in high-risk communities and includes supporting essential water infrastructure through the provision of water treatment chemicals (polymer and chlorine) and a generator to keep a major water treatment plant operating.
UNICEF and partners are distributing household water treatment chemicals to curb community transmission, deploying water chlorinators across water points to provide safe drinking water and mobilizing rapid response teams to support water chlorination and conduct disinfection activities.
More than 2.5 million people have already benefited from the WASH supplies UNICEF and its partners have distributed. UNICEF is also engaging communities, through dialogues and social media, to disseminate key messaging on causes, symptoms and best prevention practices.
On Jan. 16, 2025, community health volunteers converge for a meeting in Telkok, Kassala state, Sudan. As part of a social and behavior change initiative, UNICEF has trained and deployed over 100 community health volunteers to enhance awareness and uptake of critical health services, including childhood vaccinations. These volunteers play a critical role in preventing cholera and other disease outbreaks.
UNICEF has also:
UNICEF also continues to support the delivery of lifesaving nutrition services through 105 outpatient management programs at health facilities and 4 stabilization centers in Khartoum state. Through these efforts, so far this year over 17,000 children under age 5 with SAM have been treated and 30,000 cartons of ready-to-use therapeutic food (RUTF) and therapeutic milk have been delivered across all state localities.
Your contribution to UNICEF is more important than ever. Please donate.
Right now, the lives of the most vulnerable children hang in the balance as conflicts and crises jeopardize the care and protection that they deserve. Dependable, uninterrupted and effective foreign aid is critical to the well-being of millions of children. Please contact your members of Congress and urge them to support ongoing U.S. investments in foreign assistance.

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Protest at housing association after baby death
Protest at housing association after baby death

Yahoo

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Nordic Parents Have It Great-But Birth Rates Are Still Falling
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Nordic Parents Have It Great-But Birth Rates Are Still Falling

Much of the world is facing a birth rate crisis, and Norway is no exception despite implementing many of the policies governments, activists, and experts have touted. Newsweek has broken down why. Many trying to tackle this global issue have called for public health policies and financial plans to help make it easier for couples to have children in society. The financial crisis and its impact on housing, inflation and pay is generally cited a major contributor to people's decisions to delay having children, to have fewer children or not to have them at all. Parental leave and childcare come up just as often, with multiple experts telling Newsweek that improved policies in these areas would be a game-changer. Norway is considered a global leader in parental leave and childcare policies, with the United Nations International Children's Fund (UNICEF) ranking it among the top countries for family-friendly policies. 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Key Club Leaders Inspired By UNICEF Programs In Zambia
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Three high-school student leaders with Key Club International, a youth-led service organization and UNICEF partner for over 30 years, recall meaningful interactions with children, caregivers, community volunteers and youth child rights advocates during a recent trip with UNICEF USA to see UNICEF programs in Zambia. Children, caregivers, volunteers and early childhood development specialists gather with visitors from UNICEF USA staff and Key Club International outside the UNICEF-supported Kasunbanya Early Childhood Education Insaka (Hub) in Zambia. Key Club International, the world's largest student-led service organization, supports Start Strong: Zambia, a project through which club members around the world help raise awareness and money to support UNICEF programs for young children in the southern African nation. Three Key Club International trustees — Nicole Bunag of Indiana, Aspen Hess of Central Florida and Ethan Schmidt of Alabama — recently traveled to Zambia with UNICEF USA for a firsthand look at UNICEF's impact in the country, particularly in early education and early childhood development (ECD). They visited ECD centers, health facilities and hospitals and met with government officials and UNICEF program staff. In this Q&A with Cristina Shapiro, UNICEF USA's Chief Strategy Officer and President of the Impact Fund for Children & UNICEF Bridge Fund, the students reflect on the experience. The conversation has been edited and condensed. CRISTINA SHAPIRO: It was such a pleasure to travel with you in March, and to see the impact of the fundraising Key Club has done to support ECD programs in Zambia. Let's start with each of you saying a little bit about yourselves and your involvement in Key Club. Key Club International trustees meet with young change makers supported by UNICEF Zambia, who share how they advocate for the protection of child rights in their community. ETHAN SCHMIDT: I am based in Birmingham, Alabama, and I am a graduating senior this year. Working with Key Club for the past four years — and for the last two as an international trustee — I've been able to work pretty intimately with UNICEF as the co-chair of the Programs and Partners Committee, working on fundraising campaigns such as Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF and Start Strong: Zambia. Outside of the classroom, I am a huge language nerd, and I am also a very amateur runner, something I'm trying to build my endurance for. To summarize Key Club, I'd say it's an international service organization that works to foster student leadership and volunteerism across the globe. ASPEN HESS: I am based in Central Florida, and am also a graduating senior. I am very passionate about civic engagement and political science, which I intend to study in college. NICOLE BUNAG: I am from Indiana, and I'm a graduating senior. I plan to go to Purdue University to study engineering. Fun fact about me: I am a triplet. CRISTINA SHAPIRO: The way that you all showed up in Zambia — how you led all the conversations we had, asking incredible questions — gives me hope for the world, with you as our future leaders. So now that you have all been home for a little bit, and you've had a chance to process and reflect, tell me: what was the most meaningful part of the trip for you? ASPEN HESS: One of the top ones was definitely our experience at the community-based ECD center, or Insaka. I didn't realize how holistic the work is that is being done at these centers. I actually got to sit down with some of the maternity care volunteers in the stimulation room, some of whom walk an hour or longer every day to get there. I observed them with the infants, making sure they were getting the stimulation they need. It was so heartwarming. I also met a young girl named Anaya who is benefiting from UNICEF support through the foster care system. I had so many inspiring experiences every single day, but these are the moments that I truly cannot stop thinking about. Key Club International trustee Aspen Hess helps out during a stimulation session with an infant at a UNICEF-supported early childhood development center in Zambia during a program visit with fellow trustees Ethan Schmidt (standing far left) and Nicole Bunag (standing next to Ethan) and Cristina Shapiro and Nicole Brown from UNICEF USA. CRISTINA SHAPIRO: Yes! It's not just seeing the program in action, but getting to interact with the key staff and the volunteers who make it possible, and the incredible children and family members who are benefiting — that's what brings this all to life. And while we were there, we were really excited to learn that the government of Zambia is planning to expand this program to more communities. What do you think the government saw in these centers that made them want to do that? ETHAN SCHMIDT: I think it's the breadth of services that they provide. They are kind of a one-stop shop for enrichment. Mothers can come in from the surrounding communities with their children, access educational services and medical services, learn about nutrition. Then they go back to their communities, bringing all that important information with them, and share it with their peers. CRISTINA SHAPIRO: And we learned the government plans to expand from three Insakas — the ones Key Club's support helped power — to 200, all across the country. This is a great example of a demonstration project, showing what works, and then the government stepping up to bring that impact to many more families in need. ETHAN SCHMIDT: Yes! The scalability is great. Young students work together at a UNICEF-supported school in Zambia. CRISTINA SHAPIRO: Nicole, what will you take away from your experience in Zambia and apply in your role as a student leader in the U.S.? NICOLE BUNAG: Before I was an international trustee, I served as a UNICEF champion, where I truly got to learn and understand Key Club's work with UNICEF and our Start Strong: Zambia campaign. And getting to see firsthand how families and children in Zambia are positively impacted was definitely exciting. It was incredible! It was so cool to see adults and youth [in the places we visited in Zambia] invested in making sure child rights are protected, and their development and education prioritized. That's what I hope to do in my own school and community. International trustee. But more than that, we got the chance to talk with other student leaders in Zambia for a couple of hours, and to see the work that they do to help their community. I think we were all intrigued by what they had to say about how they help a variety of people, from 7-year-olds to 25-year-olds, and about how they tackle different topics, from drug abuse to nutrition to gender-based violence and so much more. These youth leaders create awareness for child rights. It was so cool to see adults and youth invested in making sure child rights are protected, and their development and education prioritized. That's what I hope to do in my own school and community. Related: Cristina Shapiro on Bending the Curve for Children in Zambia Investing in early childhood generates massive returns for society — up to $17 for every $1 invested in children living with disadvantages. Every year, millions of children, their parents and families benefit from UNICEF's ECD work. Learn more about UNICEF's work in early childhood development. High-school students and Key Club International trustees Ethan Schmidt, left, Aspen Hess, center and Nicole Bunag during their UNICEF program visit to Zambia in March 2025. Help UNICEF reach more children in need. Please donate today.

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