ASIA
ASIA/INDONESIA - Even if food is not lacking, children in the east are still dying from malnutrition
 Kupang (Agenzia Fides) - A lack of trained health staff, treatments and health promotion make
Indonesia's  eastern province of Nusa Tenggara Timur (NTT) one of the country's most  food insecure, despite the general availability of food. In the  drought-prone mostly rural province of 4.5 million people spread out  over 50 islands, the average per capita income is US$265 a year.
According  to the FAO office in Kupang, food is not the main problem. It exists in  abundance. Instead, a food security index needs to be established that  takes into account women's education, access to clean water, health,  electricity, passable roads and access to health services, protection  from natural disasters, deforestation and food production. The province  of NTT registers by far the highest rate of malnutrition among children  under five years, considered chronically malnourished (46.7%) or  severely malnourished (20%), in comparison to the national average of  36.8% and 13.6% respectively. Some 1,300 children were recorded as  severely acutely malnourished in 2009 in NTT, which was two percent of  all children surveyed. The province only had therapeutic foods available  to treat 10 percent
Another problem is insufficient health promotion  and lack of trained nutritionists willing to work in remote areas.  Currently there are seven trained nutritionists spread over NTT's 286  community
health posts. The government has recently launched a  program in 11 districts in the province that provides for the  distribution for 90 days of 100 grams of nutritional biscuits per day to  target energy-deficient children. Another program of WHO distributes  micronutrients. In the province of NTT, there are two medical centres  that provide nutritious food to treat the most vulnerable children and  prevent acute malnutrition. However, these interventions have a limited  impact, since not all families bring their children to the centres given  they do not consider malnutrition a problem. (AP) (Agenzia Fides  20/12/2010)
ASIA/INDONESIA
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