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Helen Keller International Receives $1.5 million USAID Grant for Child Survival

New York, May 10, 2005 – Helen Keller International (HKI) has received a $1.5 million grant from the Child Survival and Health Grants Program, which is administered by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).  The grant supports a four-year integrated program to improve nutrition, called Nutrition+, to be implemented in the Koulikoro Region of Mali, a densely populated area with few resources to benefit the population.  With Nutrition+, HKI will introduce a state-of-the-art package of nutrition interventions focusing on the most critical period for mother and child survival and development: pregnancy through the first two years of life.

Despite recent gains in democratization, governance, and economic growth, Mali has the 7th highest under-five child mortality rate in the world, and nearly 70% of these deaths occur in children younger than two years of age.  As in other West African countries, malaria, acute respiratory infection, diarrhea, and vaccine-preventable diseases like measles and tetanus are the leading direct causes of child mortality in Mali.  However, 51% of mortality is attributable to malnutrition, meaning that if these children had been adequately nourished, they would have survived.  Micronutrient deficiencies are rampant, and health statistics in the Koulikoro Region are even more alarming than the national statistics.  Whereas 88% of Malian children aged six to 59 months are anemic, 92% are anemic in Koulikoro, with iron deficiency as the main cause.  Likewise, 63% of women of reproductive age are anemic nationwide, and 68% in Koulikoro.

Beginning in October 2005, Nutrition+ will target malnutrition as the primary underlying cause of child mortality.  Efforts to improve nutritional status will consequently decrease the morbidity and mortality of infants, children under two, and women of reproductive age in the Koulikoro Region.  The package incorporates nutrition, breastfeeding, control of diarrheal disease, control of anemia, malaria control, and complements other interventions such as family planning, child spacing, and immunizations.  Working primarily with community health centers and associations, HKI seeks to assess the delivery of essential nutrition services and the accessibility, availability, and quality of facility-based services while promoting community mobilization and behavior change communication.  To reach these goals, HKI will also utilize its existing rural radio project to develop broadcasts about optimal nutrition-related behaviors.

HKI has previously worked in four of the nine health districts in the Koulikoro Region.  This most recent grant will enable HKI to expand to the entire region, reaching 85% of the population, or 452,000 people, each year.