Last Sunday morning, I was in Grant Park and happened upon the
mock refugee camp set up by Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders). I had read about the “camp in the heart of the city” when it was in Central Park and was curious so I decided to take the tour. I was somewhat skeptical of the outdoor exhibit format, but my guide Michael--a Canadian-tree-planter-turned-logistician at a camp in the DR Congo--was really engaging, and I learned quite a bit about the basic structure of MSF camps. Since Sunday, I’ve been thinking a lot particularly about MSF’s nutrition programs and the foods distributed therein. Wikipedia categorizes these foods as
“therapeutic,” (this may be a category used by more than Wikipedia, I can’t tell yet from my initial reading) which seems a little misleading given how facilely this designation is used for any number of things in North America. In fact, the designation didn’t seem appropriate either for the one other food I recognized in the Wikipedia entry, Ensure.
The two foods our guide Michael highlighted, which I had never heard about before, were
BP-5 and
Plumpy’Nut. BP-5 is one of the main foods MSF distributes at its camps. It comes in a box probably triple the size of a Jello box but the same shape. Inside, I think there are five small Jello-like paper packets that contain the BP-5 biscuits. Michael showed us how the biscuits could be broken into granules and eaten dry. The texture and taste were similar to dry, crumbly yellow cake. (I got to try some.) I didn’t get the exact ingredients, but the main components seem to be dry milk and sugar (like Filipino
polvoron) in addition, of course, to all of the vitamins added to make this food suitable for severely malnourished people. With water, BP-5 can also be made into porridge.
There doesn’t seem to be much information on BP-5 on the web (and no Wikipedia article), but I did find
one report from 1996 written by an MSF nutritionist that actually advised against distributing BP-5 in food programs because the finding in Afghanistan was that BP-5 was widely coveted by non-IDPs (internally displaced persons) and therefore sold by individuals in refugee camps to people outside, hindering relief efforts. I had thought about food as currency before but never in this context.
The other food Michael introduced to us during the tour was
Plumpy’Nut--such a goofy, onomotopaeiac name compared to the technical, non-descriptive BP-5! MSF distributes Plumpy’nut, which comes in palm-sized foil pouches, to the mothers of the most malnourished children in refugee camps because of how quickly it supposedly can bring people back to health. I didn’t actually get to open a package of this stuff, but from what Michael said and photos, it looks like very smooth peanut butter and tastes sweeter than, say, Skippy or Jif.
What interested me most about BP-5 and Plumpy’nut was the research that must have gone into developing these inexpensive, shelf-stable, nutrient-rich, easy-to-distribute and -dispense foods by
nutriset (Plumpy’s inventor) and others. In particular, I’m fascinated that these foods have been declared “acceptable to all cultures and religious faiths.” I have to remind myself of the context, that the designation is universal in a somewhat limited sense (i.e. the foods are acceptable to people starving).
My introductory lesson on Sunday made me eager to learn more about relief foods so that, at the very least, I can fill in the gaps on Wikipedia. I don’t really have a main point for this post; it’s just more food for thought.
Last edited by
happy_stomach on September 26th, 2007, 7:59 am, edited 2 times in total.