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UNICEF Report Flags Impact of Global Funding Reductions

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An estimated 14 million children are projected to experience interruptions in nutrition support and services due to recent and anticipated global funding reductions, significantly increasing their risk of severe malnutrition and mortality, as highlighted in preliminary analyses released by UNICEF during the Nutrition for Growth Summit in Paris.

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This funding crisis arises during a time of unparalleled need for children, who are grappling with record levels of displacement, ongoing and prolonged conflicts, disease outbreaks, and the dire effects of climate change—all of which are compromising their access to sufficient nutrition. The repercussions of funding cuts across 17 high-priority countries include:

An estimated 14 million children are projected to experience interruptions in nutrition support and services due to recent and anticipated global funding reductions, significantly increasing their risk of severe malnutrition and mortality, as highlighted in preliminary analyses released by UNICEF during the Nutrition for Growth Summit in Paris.

This funding crisis arises during a time of unparalleled need for children, who are grappling with record levels of displacement, ongoing and prolonged conflicts, disease outbreaks, and the dire effects of climate change—all of which are compromising their access to sufficient nutrition. The repercussions of funding cuts across 17 high-priority countries include:

  1. More than 2.4 million children suffering from severe acute malnutrition may lack access to Ready-to-use Therapeutic Food (RUTF) for the rest of 2025.
  2. Up to 2,300 life-saving stabilization centers, which provide essential care for children with severe wasting and medical complications, are at risk of closure or drastic service reductions.
  3. Nearly 28,000 outpatient therapeutic centers supported by UNICEF for malnutrition treatment are in jeopardy, with some already ceasing operations. Currently, the rates of severe wasting among children under five remain alarmingly high in various fragile contexts and humanitarian crises, with adolescent girls and women being particularly at risk.

Even before the funding reductions, the number of pregnant and breastfeeding women, along with adolescent girls, facing acute malnutrition surged from 5.5 million to 6.9 million—a 25 percent increase since 2020.

Read Also:

https://trendsnafrica.com/unicef-terms-conflicts-as-main-reason-for-global-humanitarian-crisis/

 

UNICEF warns that these numbers are likely to climb further without immediate intervention from donors and sufficient investments from national governments.