Partners In Health a Nonprofit Corporation

Partners In Health a Nonprofit Corporation


CHARITY STORY
Treating Malnutrition in Hati Among Widespread Instability
Photo Caption
Treating Malnutrition in Hati Among Widespread Instability
Photo Credit
Mélissa Jeanty / Partners In Health / Haiti

In Haiti, the number of children suffering from severe acute malnutrition has drastically increased during this time of widespread violence and political and economic instability, as food prices have skyrocketed, and resources have become even more limited. According to UNICEF, the number of children experiencing malnutrition increased by 30% in 2023 compared to the previous year, with nearly 115,600 children affected compared to 87,500 in 2022. At Zanmi Lasante, as Partners In Health is known in Haiti, the nutrition team provides screening, treatment, and education to respond to this crisis. The program serves patients, typically infants, children from 6 months to 5 years old, and pregnant or breastfeeding women, through clinic visits and through mobile clinics conducted in the surrounding communities. The mobile clinics are critical to the program because they allow our teams to reach remote communities and identify malnourished children earlier, so treatment can be delivered before health problems turn fatal.

Jolène, a mother of five, felt powerless when her youngest son, three-year-old Raphaël, fell extremely ill last August. He couldn’t stop vomiting, his belly was swelling, he was covered in rashes, and he was deteriorating as he rapidly lost weight. When Jolène brought him to the Zanmi Lasante team for help, he was immediately hospitalized: Raphaël was suffering from severe malnutrition.

“I was very affected by his illness. I had no hope at all. I thought I had lost him,” recalls Jolène. Raphaël’s condition was severe and required him to remain hospitalized for three months until he regained his strength. Today, he continues outpatient treatment with the Zanmi Lasante team monitoring his progress and supporting his nutrition, and his mom is committed to never missing an appointment. Zanmi Lasante’s nutrition program provides children with a lifesaving treatment called Nourimanba, a high-calorie, high-protein paste made from locally grown peanuts and mixed with essential vitamins and minerals. This ready-to-use therapeutic food, produced by Zanmi Lasante in partnership with local farmers, helps children gain weight and grow quickly over several weeks of care. Raphaël is just one of the thousands of children who have been saved by this food. Last year alone, 6,190 children were admitted and treated for malnutrition through Zanmi Lasante’s network of hospitals and clinics.

Haiti’s population continues to be vulnerable to malnutrition, facing food insecurity, poor infrastructure–particularly in terms of water and sanitation–and, currently, political and economic instability. Around 4.35 million Haitians are grappling with severe food insecurity. However, the Zanmi Lasante team remains steadfast, determined to record zero deaths of children under 5 years old due to malnutrition. Raphaël is one child among many to have his life saved by the incredible people at Zanmi Lasante with the support of our generous, global Partners In Health community. During this critical time in Haiti, Zanmi Lasante is sustaining their operations and providing care to those who need it most, bravely showing up for our patients every day.


CHARITY VIDEO
Building a fairer, healthier world through accompaniment
Transcript

Narrated by Winston Duke
Animation: Four hands lay in the center of the screen, placing newspapers, a notebook and a map
Narrator: Partners in Health started as a revolutionary idea, among a group of friends who believed they could help those who needed it most.
[music plays]
Animation: the map zooms into the country of Haiti
Narrator: They began working in Haiti,
Animation: the map morphs into rolling hills
Narrator: finding friends,
Animation: the hills morph into first a small house, then the community grows to include other buildings and people walking
Narrator: and partners in the community and government. And together, delivered quality healthcare to patients through accompaniment.
Animation: a PIH staff member is working with a child and parent inside their home
Narrator: It means being there with and for patients as long as it takes.
Animation: the child hugs the PIH staffer and then the staffer listens to the heartbeat of the parent
Narrator: Because when it comes to providing health care, patients are the bosses.
Animation: The map reappears, zooming out of Haiti to highlight all of the countries PIH works in in orange
Narrator: Over the past 30 years, PIH’s efforts have expanded to 11 countries and through it all, accompaniment has remained essential to achieving Global Health Equity.
Animation: The map zooms out to a spinning globe of the earth. Icons to represent stuff, staff, space, systems and support appear and circle around the globe.
Narrator: With the right stuff, staff, space, systems, and support, PIH can continue to create the building blocks of good health everywhere
Animation: The globe morphs into a sun that’s setting over some hills and a winding path
Narrator: and not just tip the scales of justice, but pave the road to a better
Animation: The sun morphs into the same orange background with the four hands shown at the beginning of the video
Narrator: and healthier future for all.
Orange screen with the white PIH logo appears, with the tagline Injustice has a cure and the website PIH.org
[music fades]

Partners In Health a Nonprofit Corporation
CFC Number
11644

Charity Type

Cause Area