Attendance Increased 35% at Five Schools in Gokwe North, Zimbabwe – Find Out Why

For the last five years, Rise Against Hunger has worked with our partner ADRA International to address food insecurity in Gokwe North, Zimbabwe. What began as emergency school feeding evolved into a sustainable agriculture project as communities in Gokwe North established school gardens and income-generating activities. This is the story of remarkable, real change in these communities — and what’s to come.

It Starts With a Meal: Supporting School Feeding During Severe Drought

In 2015 and 2016, El Niño conditions caused a severe drought in Zimbabwe — the worst that the country had experienced in 35 years. The drought led to reduced crop production and a loss of livestock. And with a large percentage of families in Zimbabwe relying on agricultural production for income, many faced socioeconomic challenges and increased food insecurity.

Food insecurity impacts education, and Gokwe North saw low primary school attendance and a dropout rate of 40%. In response to the emergency caused by the drought, Rise Against Hunger began partnering with ADRA Zimbabwe in 2017 to provide meals for school feeding for more than two dozen schools throughout Zimbabwe. The meals helped meet the nutritional needs of children, encouraged school attendance and supported families as they rebuilt their livelihoods. Over the next three years, the school feeding programs had a substantial impact on education — across the schools served, over 1,000 new students enrolled during that time.

To support long-term solutions to food insecurity, we expanded our work in Zimbabwe in 2019, implementing a sustainable agriculture project called Planting Seeds for Strong Communities.

Planting Seeds for Strong Communities: Building Resilience in Gokwe North

Rise Against Hunger’s work to address hunger starts with a meal — but it doesn’t end there. In addition to supporting the immediate nutritional needs of people currently facing hunger, we also empower communities across the globe to achieve long-term food security. The expansion of our work in Zimbabwe to include the Planting Seeds for Strong Communities project is a prime example of that approach. Rise Against Hunger and ADRA Zimbabwe began working in 2019 with five schools in Zimbabwe’s Gokwe North district to establish a sustainable home-grown school feeding program. The project aimed to not only continue supporting education and nutrition, but also to build up community resilience and the livelihoods of smallholder farmers.

Rise Against Hunger and ADRA Zimbabwe worked closely with local parents as well as community and school leaders to improve food security at the five schools and in the broader community. Each school established a garden where parents and community members volunteer to grow staple crops and vegetables. The leafy vegetables, cabbage, tomatoes, carrots, beans and onions grown in the school gardens are utilized in school meals.

In addition to the gardens, 3,000 farmers received training on climate-smart agriculture, market linkages and new crop cultivation. These crops, including sunflowers, biofortified cowpeas and millet, enabled the farmers to support the school feeding programs and earn additional income.

The five schools received sunflower oil pressing and maize shelling equipment. Farmers pay the schools to use the equipment with a portion of their grain. This allows the farmer to save time with post-harvest processing and supplies the schools with grain to utilize in their meals.

What Happened Next: The Five Schools See Results

The locally grown crops are supplying meals for the schoolchildren, and the shelling machines increased the schools’ food volume by 183%. The schools provide meals for students up to five times each week. The schools have reported improved emotional, physical and social well-being of the students and less bullying as a result of the higher volume of diverse food. The school meals also encourage attendance and academic performance — by the end of 2022, attendance had increased 35% across all schools.

Local farmers are also seeings results! More than 32% of participating households were able to meet their own food requirements during one year. This is a significant increase and a positive change. The shelling and oil pressing machines enabled farmers to process crops that they can use to feed their families or sell for additional income. Siphiwe, a farmer and mother, said, “If you have one bucket of sunflower seeds, you can get two gallons of cooking oil. This year I managed to get 32 buckets of sunflowers.”

Real solutions to end hunger do exist — and the impact in Gokwe North highlights how true this is. One school, Manyuli Primary, is now self-sufficient, utilizing food grown with its own community to feed their students. The other four schools also seeing progress, and Rise Against Hunger and ADRA Zimbabwe are working to empower these schools toward self-sufficiency.

Source: Rise Against Hunger

Belarusian President Arrives in Zimbabwe

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko arrived in Zimbabwe on Monday for talks with his counterpart, Emmerson Mnangagwa, aimed at boosting "strong cooperation" in several areas between the two countries.

Lukashenko landed in Zimbabwe's capital city, Harare, for a two-day visit and was greeted by Mnangagwa and thousands of ruling party supporters.

The two countries are close allies of Russia. Belarus has backed Russia's invasion of Ukraine, a former Soviet republic, while Zimbabwe has claimed neutrality and refused to condemn Moscow.

The two leaders plan to meet on Tuesday. The talks are aimed at strengthening "existing excellent relations" in areas such as politics, mining and agriculture, Zimbabwe's Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

"The visit is historic, as it is the first such undertaking to a sub-Saharan African nation, by President Lukashenko," the ministry said, according to Agence France-Presse.

Lukashenko has been in power since 1994. He was reelected in 2020 in a highly contested vote that was widely denounced as a sham, resulting in mass protests. Lukashenko's government cracked down violently on demonstrators, arresting more than 35,000 people and brutally beating thousands, according to The Associated Press.

Mnangagwa's reign has been shorter, coming into power in 2017 after the leader of the previous 37 years, Robert Mugabe, was forced to resign because of numerous human rights violations. Mnangagwa has faced similar controversies.

Both leaders have been accused by rivals and the West of being corrupt and limiting free speech by stifling dissent, accusations that Lukashenko and Mnangagwa have denied.

Source: Voice of America

WHO: Scope, Scale of Health Emergencies Growing

GENEVA —

World Health Organization Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warns global health challenges are growing and threatening the well-being of millions of people worldwide. He spoke at the opening of WHO’s week-long executive board meeting.

The WHO chief began his presentation on a somber note. He told meeting participants that an emergency committee convened to assess the status of the pandemic has concluded that COVID-19 remains a global health emergency.

He said the situation is much better now than a year ago when the omicron variant of the coronavirus was at its peak. But, he added, weekly reported deaths have been rising since early December. He said more than 170,000 people have lost their lives to COVID-19 in the past eight weeks.

“And that is just the reported deaths. We know the actual number is much higher. We cannot control the virus, but we can do more to address the vulnerabilities in populations and health systems.”

Tedros said health providers have the knowledge and means to control the spread of other diseases as well. He outlined an ambitious program for promoting health and protecting people from diseases. These, as well as other proposals for how the world can better prepare and respond to future health emergencies will be under discussion by member countries this week.

Tedros said progress has been made over the past year in promoting health, by addressing the root causes of disease. He called this action essential in achieving a target set by WHO of seeing one billion more people enjoying better health and well-being.

“On trans-fat, we have seen an almost five-fold increase in the number of people protected by WHO-recommended policies on the use of industrially produced trans-fat, from 550 million people to 2.6 billion, in just four years. But as you know, still five billion are unprotected.”

Last year, he said, WHO reached the target it set to support 100 million tobacco users in stopping smoking. He noted, however, this left an estimated 600 million users who want to kick the habit and need support.

Tedros presented numerous examples of key health achievements in both communicable and non-communicable diseases. He also acknowledged setbacks in many of these same areas, indicating the necessity of remaining alert and responding rapidly to health emergencies whenever and wherever they may arise.

Source: Voice of America

WHO: Over 1.6B People Infected with Neglected Tropical Diseases

Ahead of World Neglected Tropical Diseases Day Monday, the World Health Organization is calling for action to tackle these debilitating illnesses, which affect an estimated 1.65 billion people globally.

A diverse group of 20 parasitic and bacterial tropical diseases is categorized as neglected. This is because they disproportionally affect people who live in poor, remote communities and are not on the list of global health priorities.

Ibrahima Soce Fall is director of WHO’s Department of Neglected Tropical Diseases. He says these vector-borne diseases are transmitted by insects in areas that lack safe water, sanitation, and access to health care. He says they also are spread via contaminated food and water.

Fall says they cause immense suffering because of their disfiguring and disabling impact.

“If you take diseases like onchocerciasis, you know, so-called river blindness because it can lead to blindness. The same for trachoma. So, these are so many diseases that are fatal and very debilitating,” he said.

Trachoma is an eye disease that can cause permanent blindness.

Fall says these diseases do not attract the amount of investment needed to access health services or develop new tools for diagnostics, treatments, and vaccines.

He notes some of these ailments have been around for a very long time. For instance, the biblical disease, leprosy, still exists in 139 countries and dengue, which has been around for 800 years, remains prevalent in 129 nations.

Despite the many challenges, progress is being made in the elimination of the NTDs. WHO reports the number of people requiring NTD interventions fell by 80 million between 2020 and 2021. It finds 47 countries have eliminated at least one NTD and more countries are in the process of achieving this target.

According to the Carter Center, there were only 13 human cases of Guinea worm disease last year, pushing the illness closer to eradication. The Atlanta-based center was co-founded by former U.S. President Jimmy Carter and his wife, Rosalynn Carter. When it began leading the international campaign to eradicate Guinea worm in 1986, there were an estimated 3.5 million cases in at least 21 countries in Africa and Asia.

WHO officials say the goal it has set to eliminate at least one neglected tropical disease in 100 countries by 2030 can be achieved. It says the scientific community has the tools and the know-how to save lives and prevent suffering. But WHO says nations need to act together and invest in helping get rid of this dreaded group of diseases.

Source: Voice of America

Capacity building at points of entry during COVID-19 pandemic: harmonising training curriculum for Economic Community of West African States

Abstract

This paper describes the process for developing, validating and disseminating through a train-the-trainer (TOT) event a standardised curriculum for public health capacity building for points of entry (POE) staff across the 15-member state Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) that reflects both international standards and national guidelines.

A five-phase process was used in developing the curriculum: phase (1) assessment of existing materials developed by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Africa CDC and the West African Economic and Monetary Union, (2) design of retained and new, harmonised content, (3) validation by the national leadership to produce final content, (4) implementation of the harmonised curriculum during a regional TOT, and (5) evaluation of the curriculum.

Of the nine modules assessed in English and French, the technical team agreed to retain six harmonised modules providing materials for 10 days of intensive training. Following the TOT, most participants (n=28/30, 93.3%) indicated that the International Health Regulations and emergency management modules were relevant to their work and 96.7% (n=29/30) reported that the training should be cascaded to POE staff in their countries.

The ECOWAS harmonised POE curriculum provides a set of training materials and expectations for national port health and POE staff to use across the region. This initiative contributes to reducing the effort required by countries to identify emergency preparedness and response capacity-building tools for border health systems in the Member States in a highly connected region.

Source: British Medical Journal