Clinical Research

Nutritional Status and Feeding Practices of Children in IDP Camps

SSHIA Administrator

Super Manager

| Published April 04, 2026

Abstract

Internally displaced persons face heightened nutritional vulnerabilities. This study assessed the nutritional status of children under five in three major IDP camps in South Sudan, examining feeding practices, food security, and anthropometric indicators. The research provides evidence-based recommendations for nutrition programming in humanitarian settings.

Methodology

Cross-sectional assessment using standardized anthropometric measurements, 24-hour dietary recalls, and household food security scales. Sample included 1,800 children across three IDP camps. WHO growth standards applied for nutritional classification.

Key Findings

Global acute malnutrition rate was 14.3%, exceeding emergency thresholds. Exclusive breastfeeding rates were 48%. Minimum dietary diversity achieved by only 32% of children. Integrated nutrition programs showed 25% improvement in recovery rates.

References

1. WHO. (2023). Child Growth Standards. 2. WFP. (2023). Nutrition in Humanitarian Settings. 3. UNICEF. (2022). Nutrition Assessment Report.

About the Author

SSHIA Administrator

Super Manager
Contact Author

Publication Details

Category
Clinical Research
Published
Apr 04, 2026
Attachments
0 file(s)

Share This Research

Related Publications