Community Therapeutic Care

Concern, in association with Valid International, has pioneered a new approach to dealing with acute malnutrition.

A young girl in Giarra Clinic, Ethiopia, eating some ready-to-use-thereapeutic food. June 26, 2008. Photo: Julien Behal/PAThis approach, called community therapeutic care (CTC), has proved to be extremely effective, so much so that it is now becoming the preferred approach to tackling malnutrition.

Before the development of community therapeutic care, the traditional way of treating malnutrition was through therapeutic feeding centres: large centres where patients are admitted for an average of 30 days. Carers of malnourished children often have to travel long distances to access these centres, many having to leave the rest of their children at home for three weeks or longer.

Treating people in their own homes

The central principle of CTC is to treat malnourished children in their homes. As a result, it inevitably reaches more people than the traditional centre-based schemes.

A recent survey in Malawi showed that Concern’s CTC programme reached three out of four people in need. A traditional feeding programme in an adjacent region only reached around one in four.

New ways to fight hunger: video

The video below focuses on CTC and the other innovative methods Concern uses to fight malnutrition.

Ready-to-use food

Children who have been admitted to our programme are provided with weekly medical treatment and given one week's supply of therapeutic food to take home. This vitamin-enriched food, called ready-to-use-therapeutic-food, is the key to success.

As it is oil-based, it has a huge advantage over traditional water-based mixtures. Even someone with no access to clean water can use it to nurse a malnourished child back to health.

Quality care

A family whose child is attending our programme will also get visits every week from community volunteers and local Concern outreach staff. This way the child’s health is monitored, and the family is given tips on everything from breast feeding to personal hygiene.

Emily Mates, Concern’s CTC programme support officer in Ethiopia, says that “Concern’s approach is about more than just feeding the starved. It’s also about building up the community’s infrastructure – giving it the built-in ability to handle, and maybe even avoid, that next big famine threat.”

Wider acceptance

The success of the CTC approach has recently become more widely recognised. A number of UN organisations have now committed to using it. They have also recommended that governments should incorporate CTC into their health and nutrition policies.

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