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samiasauce 🧸ྀི
samiasauce 🧸ྀི
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Monday 16 March 2020 19:15:12 GMT
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xomelissatovar
Melissa Tovar :
I love these !!
2020-03-16 22:00:18
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jhonbenitez
Jhon :
Ugh u know all the good products! Love it!!!
2020-03-16 23:39:46
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kim_wsg
Kim :
@juliaa.ktt
2020-03-18 19:52:55
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skxc03
Sousouuuuu :
@skincarebyhyram
2020-06-02 23:16:02
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c.hazzy
London.chazann :
How much are these ?
2020-06-11 15:38:10
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Packed with calories and protein, the same magic mixture in Plumpy’Nut sachets has successfully treated famine for decades—but due to funding cuts it's now in short supply. Before Plumpy’Nut was developed as the first ready-to-use therapeutic food, or RUTF, cases of severe acute malnutrition—primarily occurring among children under 5 years old, diagnosed by very low weight-for-height scores and arm circumference—needed round-the-clock care at therapeutic feeding centers. Nurses at these makeshift hospitals in often remote areas would feed infants F100, a high-energy milk powder also made by Nutriset. Bacteria was often rife. But Plumpy’Nut has proven to be a much more effective option as emergency food, says medical doctor Steve Collins, founder of advocacy group Valid Nutrition. “RUTF contains all the essential nutrients required for someone to recover from severe acute malnutrition,” Collins says. “They’re easy to transport, extremely energy dense, and don’t require a cold supply chain or clean water to work.” Some RUTF sachets have reached Gaza—but supplies are rapidly dwindling. Amid mounting evidence of widespread starvation and famine, these sachets are the number one treatment, says Emmanuel Berbain, nutrition adviser at Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). “From what we’ve seen on the ground, we’re in a famine situation already, where deterioration isn’t a matter of months, weeks, or days—it’s hours.” US foreign aid cuts are also depleting UNICEF’s RUTF stocks. The humanitarian organization warned in March that supply was running short in 17 countries, affecting 2.4 million children suffering from severe acute malnutrition. Widespread famine is also occurring in Sudan. “The pipeline is drying up,” says Kirk Prichard, vice president of programs for humanitarian charity Concern US. “Cameroon is expected to run out of RUTF this month, with Nigeria and Somalia soon to follow.”
Packed with calories and protein, the same magic mixture in Plumpy’Nut sachets has successfully treated famine for decades—but due to funding cuts it's now in short supply. Before Plumpy’Nut was developed as the first ready-to-use therapeutic food, or RUTF, cases of severe acute malnutrition—primarily occurring among children under 5 years old, diagnosed by very low weight-for-height scores and arm circumference—needed round-the-clock care at therapeutic feeding centers. Nurses at these makeshift hospitals in often remote areas would feed infants F100, a high-energy milk powder also made by Nutriset. Bacteria was often rife. But Plumpy’Nut has proven to be a much more effective option as emergency food, says medical doctor Steve Collins, founder of advocacy group Valid Nutrition. “RUTF contains all the essential nutrients required for someone to recover from severe acute malnutrition,” Collins says. “They’re easy to transport, extremely energy dense, and don’t require a cold supply chain or clean water to work.” Some RUTF sachets have reached Gaza—but supplies are rapidly dwindling. Amid mounting evidence of widespread starvation and famine, these sachets are the number one treatment, says Emmanuel Berbain, nutrition adviser at Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). “From what we’ve seen on the ground, we’re in a famine situation already, where deterioration isn’t a matter of months, weeks, or days—it’s hours.” US foreign aid cuts are also depleting UNICEF’s RUTF stocks. The humanitarian organization warned in March that supply was running short in 17 countries, affecting 2.4 million children suffering from severe acute malnutrition. Widespread famine is also occurring in Sudan. “The pipeline is drying up,” says Kirk Prichard, vice president of programs for humanitarian charity Concern US. “Cameroon is expected to run out of RUTF this month, with Nigeria and Somalia soon to follow.”

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