Timely follow-up and care for children with high risk of malnutrition contribute to preventing related child morbidity. Parents are encouraged to regularly consult health workers as prescribed and report any incident that may affect child's health.
Mary*, a 25-year-old mother of three living in Mahama II Refugee Camp in Rwanda, experienced a lactational mastitis that required surgery and made it difficult for her to breastfeed properly her six-month-old child, Jayden*. When Mary* took her child for vaccination at 2.5 months, health workers noticed that his weight was not improving.
“Because of my breast complication, Jayden’s weight had dropped to 2 kilograms,” said Mary*
To improve the nutrition status of Mary*’s child, Save the Children’s nutrition staff enrolled him in an Infant and Young Child Feeding (IYCF) programme to receive breastmilk substitutes for one month. This support helped the child gain weight and improve his overall growth.
“I am very grateful for the nutrition support I received. Otherwise, my child might not have survived,” reflected Mary whose child has also gained in weight to 6.7 kilograms, height to 64 centimetres, and Mid-Upper Arm Circumference (MUAC) to 13.
With the partnership with UNHCR, BPRM, and the Government of Rwanda, Save the Children is implementing nutrition programme, which includes preventive and response services to Severe and Moderate cases of Acute Malnutrition (SAM and MAM), Infant and Young Child Feeding (IYCF), Inpatient care, and Micronutrient supplementation in Mahama II Refugee Camp, Nkamira Transit Centre and Nyabiheke Refugee Camp.
From January to March 2026, the nutrition programme received 424 new cases of children in Mahama II and Nyabiheke Refugee Camps, and Nkamira Transit Centre.