June 22, 2008
A Life Saver Called "Plumpynut"
Anderson Cooper Reports On A Nutritional Breakthrough
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Play CBS Video Video 'Miracle' Food Saves Lives Plumpynut is a cheap, nutritious food that is saving starving children in the developing world. Anderson Cooper reports on why this product is effective and how it could save even more lives.
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(CBS)
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Fast Facts Niger Learn about the people, economy and history.
"There's many countries in Africa now saying, 'We want a factory. We want a factory.' Well let's give it to them," he says. "We just have to focus on these areas. We don’t have to feed the whole world. We have to go for the jugular. Where are they dying? Where are they wasted? That’s where we have to intervene. If you feed them well until they're two or three years old it's won. They're healthy, they can get a healthy life. If you miss that window, it's finished."
In Niger, most children need help now during what’s called the "hunger season," just before the new harvest. Old food supplies have run out and about all that’s left is millet, a basic grain women pound for porridge. But millet doesn’t have enough nutrients to keep kids alive; in America we use it as birdseed.
Normally a children's hospital 60 Minutes visited would have more patients than beds. But now, thanks to Plumpynut, it has empty beds. Dr. Susan Shepherd, a pediatrician from Butte, Mont., runs Doctors Without Borders in Niger.
She says children that would have been hospitalized in the past can now be treated at home. "The reason we can do that is because we can give children Plumpynut here in the ambulatory center, and they take a week’s ration home. Moms treat their children at home and come back every week for a weight check," Dr. Shepherd explains.
That's what Sahia Ibrahim has been doing. She’s already lost four children to malnutrition. Now her six-month-old twins, Hassana and Husseina, are malnourished and she’s worried they might die too. So she’s been coming to the hospital for Plumpynut.
Hassana, at six months old, weighs only seven pounds. While that's what a newborn should weigh, the little girl has put on a pound in just a week thanks to Plumpynut.
Children are weighed and measured at the distribution sites. They're also examined to make sure they don't have any serious infections. Malnutrition destroys a child's immune system, so they're more susceptible to diseases and less capable of recovering from them.
"Often these kids aren't even hungry. It's the opposite. They are anorexic because of the deficiencies they have. They lose their appetite," Tectonidis explains.
That's what happened to Mansour Miko and Maroufee Mazoo. Less than a year old, they had stopped eating and became listless and weak -- so weak that when their mothers brought them to get Plumpynut, the nurse put them in a van and sent them straight to the hospital. Three days later however, they were smacking their lips on Plumpynut, almost ready to go home.
"Have you seen kids who were on the brink of death brought back by Plumpynut?" Cooper asks.
"Oh, yeah, for sure. Again and again and again and again," Dr.Shepherd says.
But not always. Sometimes parents wait too long before bringing their child to doctors. 60 Minutes found Rashida Mahmadou in intensive care, barely clinging to life.
Rashida's condition was very serious. Her skin was literally peeling away -- one side effect of malnutrition, as skin becomes thin, pliable, cracks easily, and bacteria invade.
Just two hours later, Rashida's little heart stopped beating. She was just 19 months old.
"She died of severe, acute malnutrition," says Shepherd, who says she sees this happening every day.
Asked how she deals with so many kids dying, Shepherd tells Cooper, "It breaks your heart. It can break your spirit. It can ruin your confidence in your ability to be a good doctor. And it is sad. And I carry memories of many, many children with me and I'll carry them with me for my entire life. But you certainly cannot indulge yourself in that kind of sadness. We need to do something about this."
Produced By Robert Anderson and Casey Morgan
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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See all 237 CommentsThe comments about worries of diabetes KILL me! When you are starved, you are SO far from facing TYPE 2 (let's clarify). You just need to eat, and you need to eat no, and you need fat and sugar and protien NOW. So seriosly people, educate yourself before you talk about starving children as though they are obsese Americans. Sheesh.
In sadly observing dear Rashida who died in this report, there is nothing more heartbreaking than helplessly watching a precious child starve to death. As if nothing could have been done. But is that true? Not according to this report.
How wonderful to see an amazing reversal, with %u201CPlumpynet%u201D in other cases. It is a temporary solution, but what a blessing to have a miracle product to literally save them. Touching.
It was also especially touching to observe the compassion of the wonderful doctors involved, Dr. Tectonidis and Dr. Shepherd. We should honor them and thank them.
A beautiful bible proverb states: %u201CWhoever has pity on the poor lends to the Lord, and he will repay him for his good deed.%u201D Proverbs 19:17
So God lovingly regards such compassionate giving as %u201Cloans%u201D to Him that He repays with blessings and favor.
Thank you so much Anderson Cooper and %u201C60 Minutes%u201D for this %u201Cgood news%u201D report (despite the sadness in the report too) and focusing on the most important thing, the dear human lives involved. I keep them in my thoughts and prayers, and the time to come when no dear child will ever starve on this beautiful planet and no mother will ever have to grieve. Wishing you all blessings.
P.S. What about all the rapes from tribes going village to village? Did you know the biggest prize to the tribal men are young boys??? Oh that''s not a feel good story...can''t print that....sorry I mentioned it CBS
Good for you... but you should include a box of condoms with that donation. By supporting them you increase the population which in turn causes more starvation. You become part of the problem! How come you don''t get this? Sure, I feel bad for the children... but those children (who get plumpynut and manage to live) grow up in 11 short years and have more children with no end in sight. Their own government does nothing to help... they compound the problem due to war and plundering of resources. Wake up and don''t buy the hype! Want to make a difference? Start volunteering in your own neighborhood.
First to "rikduke" who says that overpopulation is the cause and nature should take its course to reduce the size of the population. This is not the cause of the malnutrition. Niger''s population density is about 11 per square km. Compare that to Kansas (12.7/km) or NY (about 27/km) and you see that Niger is not overpopulated! Reading a bit about Niger will show that the causes of malnutrition include instability, drought, unrest, etc.
Also, I am horrified to read comments that existing children should not be fed now because they will have no future later. Is it impossible that Niger will one day improve? If so, then we should not give up! If not, then why not exterminate all people in Niger now? (Of course, that would seem crazy.) Also, does any child deserve to suffer a horrible, slow death from malnutrition?
Finally, I read comments that argued for the sterilization of these people. These are REAL PEOPLE! No one would suggest that we sterilize America%u2019s poor because they cannot support their children and rely on welfare? You cannot forcibly sterilize a population!
Birth control would indeed improve the problem, but do NOT make such offensive comments to prove a point!
I can''t see financially supporting this until the real problem is addressed and corrected.
The simple fact is this, you can not sustain a population when said population outgrows it''s available resources. It MUST die off until it''s sized properly for the available resources. It is the law of nature. This is a law that can not be amended, changed, or repealed. Like gravity, it just is.
Nature is a delicate balance of diverse species. We can not continue to tilt that balance without consequence. We, as one of the species on this planet, have had THE biggest negative impact on nature and the more we grow our species the worse it is going to get...eventually nature will take care of it all. "Man did not weave the web of life, he is merely a strand in it."
....plastered with photo''s those poor innocent starving children......you know, the kind of pictures that twist and squeeze your heart until the money drips out ??
Then you can feel less guilty for throwing out all those left-overs from last night''s supper.
Instead of pictures of sad unwanted children, I wonder how much money you''d fork over if their website had photos of the mothers having unprotected *** whilst their malnourished children wait outside ?
You see a cute under-fed baby, whereas I see irresponsible and cruel parenting.
=FB=
I grieve for those people.
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