| IRD Responds to Rising Food Prices Worldwide
Washington, DC —
May 1, 2008 — In the past months, rising food prices have created an international crisis that the U.N. recently called a "silent tsunami". Every year, over 10 million children under five die from readily preventable diseases; more than half of those deaths are directly attributable to malnutrition.
IRD currently directly distributes food aid in four countries—Cambodia, Chad, Laos, and Niger—to address short-term food needs. By tapping into local expertise and developing market-based solutions, IRD ensures that in the long term, vulnerable people are better able to cope with increasing food prices and keep their families healthy. DONATE NOW >>
IRD Releases New Study Highlighting Malnutrition And Obesity Facing American Indian Populations
Kansas City, MO —
Updated April 30, 2008 — The full study is now available online as a pdf.
Malnutrition is a growing issue for marginalized and underserved segments of the U.S. population, especially rural and reservation-based American Indians, finds a new study, commissioned by IRD and conducted by Dr. Michele Companion of the University of Colorado. The study examines the “double burden” of poverty: malnutrition along with a rapid rise in obesity and diet-related chronic diseases in American Indians. MORE>>
IRD also announced a petition to raise awareness about malnutrition among American Indians, originating with Mayor of Kansas City Mark Funkhouser, available to sign online. Help us make your voice heard on this issue.
Read both the Kansas City Star and Associated Press coverage of the event and the International Food Aid Conference in general. (Clips are in PDF format. Click
here to get Acrobat Reader.)
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