1 / 7

Therapeutic Feeding Programs .

Therapeutic Feeding Programs . Therapeutic Feeding Programs. Therapeutic Feeding Programs: Entry and Discharge Criteria. Entry: <-3 Z scores (<70% reference median) WFH and/or edema Other anthropometric or clinical signs or lack of appetite Discharge:

lotus
Download Presentation

Therapeutic Feeding Programs .

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Therapeutic Feeding Programs.

  2. Therapeutic Feeding Programs

  3. Therapeutic Feeding Programs: Entry and Discharge Criteria • Entry: • <-3 Z scores (<70% reference median) WFH and/or edema • Other anthropometric or clinical signs or lack of appetite • Discharge: • Discharge: >=-2.5 Z scores or >=75% reference median WFH for 2 successive weeks • Good appetite • Free of illness • Dealt with causes at household level to prevent relapse

  4. Therapeutic Feeding Programs • Severe PEM is a medical emergency! Major causes of death: starvation, hypoglycemia, hypothermia. • In cases of kwashiorkor: other medical complications including congestive cardiac failure • Phase 1: Intensive Care Phase (24 hr care – 1 week) • Objectives: control infection, rehydrate, treat malaria, intestinal parasites, septic shock, dermatitis of kwashiorkor, measles immunization and Vit A • Feeding: 10-12 feeds/day with therapeutic milk (F75, F100) • Aiming for 80-100 kcals/kg body weight/day, micronutrients • Continued breastfeeding for infants whenever possible • Phase 2: Rehabilitation Phase (daily care – 5 weeks) • Objectives: Weight gain, train caretaker • Feeding: 6 meals/day with mixture of therapeutic milk and cereal-based porridge based on fortified blended foods, transition to a local diet. Feed as much as the child will eat – aiming for at least 150 kcals/kg body weight/day

  5. Therapeutic Feeding Programs: Program Monitoring

  6. Therapeutic Feeding Programs:Phasing Out • TFP should be phased out as soon as existing health facilities are adequate to care for severely malnourished individuals with appropriate services, follow-up and sensitization are implemented in cases of malnutrition, and no large-scale nutritional deterioration is expected.

  7. Key references • WHO. The Management of Nutrition in Major Emergencies (2000). • Mason, J. Lessons on the Nutrition of Displaced People. J Nutr. 132: 2096S-2103S, 2002 • ACC/SCN. Fourth Report on the World Nutrition Situation (2000). • WHO. Field Guide on Rapid Nutritional Assessment in Emergencies (1995). • ACC/SCN. Assessment of Nutritional Status in Emergency-Affected Populations: Adolescents (2000). • ACC/SCN. Assessment of Nutritional Status in Emergency-Affected Populations: Adults (2000). • Emergency Nutrition Network. Infant Feeding in Emergencies: Policy, Strategy and Practice (1999). • WHO. Management of Severe Malnutrition: A Manual for Physicians and Other Senior Health Workers (1999). • MSF. Refugee Health (1997). • ACC/SCN. Report on the Nutrition Situation of Refugees and Displaced Populations (2001).

More Related