UNICEF has raised the alarm over looming global funding shortfalls that could disrupt life-saving nutrition services for an estimated 14 million children in 17 high-priority countries. The warning comes as part of preliminary data shared at the Nutrition for Growth Summit in Paris.
The potential cuts come at a time of unprecedented global need, as children face rising levels of displacement, protracted conflict, disease outbreaks, and the worsening effects of climate change—all of which are undermining access to food and basic health care.
“We’ve seen major progress in fighting child malnutrition over the past two decades, but all of that is now at risk,” said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell. “Fifty-five million fewer children are stunted today than in 2000. But these gains are fragile—and millions of lives could be lost if support is withdrawn.”
Among the projected consequences of the funding decline:
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2.4 million severely malnourished children could go without access to Ready-to-use Therapeutic Food (RUTF) by the end of 2025.
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Up to 2,300 stabilization centers—which treat life-threatening complications of malnutrition—may be forced to shut or scale back.
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Around 28,000 outpatient treatment centers, supported by UNICEF, could close or reduce services. Some have already halted operations.