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  • GreenBeingNancy
    GreenBeingNancy said 1 month Edit Delete

    In order to find solutions, we must first discover what are the causes of poverty. I have complied some presentations discovered on SlideShare and posted it at the following link:

    http://www.slideshare.net/event/blogaction-day-2008-poverty

    Some of them do give solutions or provides leads on where one can go to take a stand. Sometimes we just need to remember history and remind ourselves not to make the same mistake. Thank you, Pawlowski, for giving me the inspiration to start this rolling.

  • spiderweb99
    spiderweb99 said 1 month Edit Delete

    Patrick, you helped to give these children a voice just by uploading this news clip as a slide show on Slideshare .. NOW LETS SCREAM IT FROM THE ROOF TOPS !!! Bravo !!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... Patrick ...... Spider :)

  • Diramar
    Diramar said 1 month Edit Delete

    My friend, everything has been said.
    The poverty and hunger is a sad reality of the world.
    In Brazil a non-governmental organization,make with plants common here, one meal and this meal, very rich in nutrients, is distributed for free. There is also a follow up to see the weight gain and improve the health of children assisted ..
    It is clear that there is no action from the Government.
    Is a light..
    Thank you my dear Patrick ...

  • nikkitta
    nikkitta said 1 month Edit Delete

    I understand all about this problem, I am social worker.
    Good of you to concern about it, having read what doctors said i found they don´t have a solution, that´s real, a sad subject that must at least be talked about!

  • jcbaraujo
    jcbaraujo said 1 month Edit Delete

    E ainda dizemos que sofremos...Apesar da fortes cenas,um documento que dispensa comentários.Parabéns.Beijos,Jussara.

  • SRINI
    SRINI said 1 month Edit Delete

    Who is responsible for this mismatch between what is needed (milk ...fish) v what is given (corn...porridge)? That needs investigation and correction. If ur preso reaches the rt persons it wd hv served its purpose. tnx for an off beat preso.

  • doina
    doina said 1 month Edit Delete

    It is a dramatic situation in the world about the kids’ problem!

    How much innocence is in their eyes! How innocent they are in their existence!

    It shines the asking between the tears (if they still have tears…) and we know why and we watch at their eyes!

    Their eyes are “bigger” than their bodies…

    Trist and real… the malnutrition, the uncounted life for what they are addicted to live!

    What is to do?!?

    To ask to the people to not love and make kids anymore? No way!

    To not think about the continuity of life on the poor countries? No way!

    To refuse to know about,… to accept it as it is? No way!

    The malnutrition is a consequence of different attitudes and interests…

    Only praying to GOD is not enough!

    What is to do?!?

    When we will see that from the money from our taxes few % will go for to save the kids, we will know that we will save the life!

    How many genius are borne and have not to eat! How many talented kids are born and will have never the chance to express themselves?

    We will never know because with a little help it will be never enough!



    Ave Maria!



    Thank you, Patrick for this so special presentation!

    Doina

  • vili48
    vili48 said 1 month Edit Delete

    Dear Patrick, i agree with Katerina completely. Not command of a language enough, to say more. Thank for share this.Salute. Vili

  • ak85ka
    ak85ka said 1 month Edit Delete

    Do you know what I felt after watching this slideshow? A punch in the stomach... and a lot of shame... Shame for all the things am having when these kids are dying for some milk... Shame for the way am living when kids are starving for things am taking for granted...
    Remember when I was young there was a poem talking about our world that was built to be 'beautiful and moral... full of angels'... Most of the times I keep wonderfing where all these angels have gone... maybe because we made this so 'beautiful and moral world' an unfair place where angels have no room to exist any more... Maybe these angels are these young kids who still believe that we haven't lost yet completely the human side of ourselves... The question is 'have we???'...
    Thank you Patrick for awakening us from the deep sleep we have been into for such a very long time...

  • GreenBeingNancy
    GreenBeingNancy said 1 month Edit Delete

    Thanks for sharing this, Pawlowski. Join Blog Action Day and post any articles relating to poverty on October 15th. For details go to:

    http://site.blogactionday.org/resources/post-ideas/
    http://www.standagainstpoverty.org/

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    A Neglected Crisis

    from Pawlowski, 1 month ago Add as contact

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    1. Slide 1: Childhood Malnutrition Labeled a 'Neglected' Humanitarian Crisis By Mona Ghuneim New York 17 September 2008 Montage :
    2. Slide 2: A major international aid organization says current nutrition programs do not adequately target childhood malnutrition, particularly in what the agency calls \"high burden\" areas such as Southeast Asia, the Sahel and the Horn of Africa. From VOA's New York bureau, Mona Ghuneim has the story.
    3. Slide 3: The medical aid group Doctors Without Borders says, despite global efforts that include billions of dollars in donated food aid every year, deficits in diet quality for young children are not being properly addressed.
    4. Slide 4: Nutrition advisor to the group, Dr. Susan Shepherd, says severe malnutrition contributes to about five million deaths each year in children under the age of five and leaves millions more with lifelong complications. She says there are 20 million severely malnourished children around the world, and another 40 to 50 million others are in the early stages of the condition.
    5. Slide 5: Dr. Shepherd says this is unacceptable, particularly when the medical community knows the problem and the solution.
    6. Slide 6: \"International food aid, including that sent from the U.S., does not have anything [in it] specifically for young infants and toddlers,\" said Dr. Shepherd. \"Infants everywhere need the same energy-dense, nutrient-rich foods to stay healthy and to grow. They need milk, eggs, meat, fish.\"
    7. Slide 7: Instead, the nutrition experts says current food aid for children consists largely of corn or wheat or soy-blended porridge, ingredients which can actually inhibit the absorption of essential minerals, such as zinc, and have no animal- source content.
    8. Slide 8: Dr. Ron Waldman of Columbia University's School of Public Health in New York says there have been tremendous developments in the past few years in products that target severe malnutrition. One of them is a milk-fortified, peanut butter-like spread that is being used, albeit on a small scale, in countries like Chad, Niger and Bangladesh.
    9. Slide 9: Dr. Waldman also works with the United States Agency for International Development. He says the global community must do more and must act in a way that benefits children, rather than governments and corporations.
    10. Slide 10: \"That is a problem that has been long and sorely neglected, especially now that we have so many new tools of tremendous efficacy,\" said Dr. Waldman. \"We have been acting very frequently in our own best interests rather than in the best interests of those people who are amongst the poorest and most vulnerable in the world.\"
    11. Slide 11: At a recent conference in New York, Columbia University health experts and representatives from the group Doctors Without Borders discussed ways to better tackle the crisis of childhood malnutrition.
    12. Slide 12: Dr. Buddhima Lokuge says this is essentially a hidden crisis, because most malnourished children live in the poorest, most neglected parts of the world.
    13. Slide 13: The manager of Doctors Without Borders' Access to Essential Medicines Campaign says these \"malnutrition hotspots\" will continue to spiral down and suffer from economic, social and personal loss if the global community does not address the problem of diet quality.
    14. Slide 14: As long as quantity rather than quality continues to be at the forefront of international aid to young children, Dr. Lokuge says chronic, annual illnesses and complications from malnutrition will abound.
    15. Slide 15: \"Ultimately, there is no way that the poorest mothers in the world will secure the nutrition that their children need to have good educational outcomes, to have long-term health, unless as an international-national community we provide safety nets and protections for those children,\" said Dr. Lokuge.
    16. Slide 16: Dr. Lokuge says strategies must be implemented and adapted to local conditions, but the international community has the means and resources to tackle the problem. And just as important, he says, the global community has something the malnourished children lack - a voice.
    17. Slide 17: He uses the HIV/AIDS epidemic as an example where protests and public awareness made great strides in controlling a serious crisis.
    18. Slide 18: \"If we can get the same voice and advocacy and outcry that the HIV activists managed to generate for HIV - a disease which actually costs much much more to keep people on treatment [than malnutrition] - it just goes to show you that it is not so much sustainability, but political voice [that matters],\" he said.
    19. Slide 19: The doctors agree that there is no one solution to overcoming malnutrition, but that there must be political will and a commitment to act. Without anyone to speak out on behalf of suffering children, they say, the price of doing nothing may be very costly.
    20. Slide 20: By Mona Ghuneim New York 17 September 2008 A trusted source of news and information since 1942 http://www.voanews.com/english/2008-09-17-voa56.cfm