Malnutrition in Nigeria: “I don’t know how to say it any more clearly. This is an emergency”

With the current trend, we may soon be looking at an even more catastrophic situation for the children in northern Nigeria.

An MSF staff member takes information from new patients at the outpatient therapeutic feeding center in the Jega local government area of Kebbi state.

An MSF staff member takes information from new patients at the outpatient therapeutic feeding center in the Jega local government area of Kebbi state. | Nigeria 2025 © Abba Adamu Musa/MSF

A devastating malnutrition crisis is unfolding across northern Nigeria. In Kebbi state, since June more than 400 severely malnourished children have been hospitalized each week in the inpatient therapeutic feeding centers Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) runs, while over 1,400 are admitted for outpatient care weekly. 

These numbers are staggering—and they’re still rising. The situation is so dire that our teams have had to stop treating children with moderate acute malnutrition because so many others are in more critical condition.

Katrin Kisswani, a nurse and president of MSF Belgium, has just returned from Kebbi. Here, she shares what the team is witnessing on the ground, day after day. 

By Katrin Kisswani, president of MSF Belgium 


“She was barely conscious when we arrived,” says Rukayya, cradling her little daughter in her lap. Hamida is nearly 2, she tells me. When they arrived at Sir Yahaya Hospital in Kebbi a week ago, they were rushed straight into the emergency department. After a rapid assessment, Hamida was admitted to MSF’s inpatient therapeutic feeding center. Her diagnosis was the same as every child admitted here: severe acute malnutrition.

Over the past 20 years, I’ve worked in MSF facilities around the world, but this is the first time I’ve seen an MSF project with such a massive number of malnourished patients. Our team in Kebbi runs two inpatient facilities and six outpatient clinics. Since June, more than 400 severely malnourished children have been hospitalized per week, while over 1,400 have received outpatient care weekly.  

Children are dying, the crisis is out of control, and the outlook is worsening given the cuts to international aid budgets.

The project uses 100,000 packets of therapeutic food every week. Today, more than 9,000 children are enrolled in our outpatient nutrition program. These numbers are staggering—and they’re still rising.

The causes of this crisis are complex. The economic situation in Kebbi is precarious, and food prices have skyrocketed. The security situation in several areas remains volatile, disrupting farming and limiting access to markets. Most people in Kebbi state don’t have access to clean water, and basic health care—including childhood vaccinations—is often unavailable or unaffordable. Sick children are far more vulnerable to malnutrition, and here they fall sick repeatedly with malaria, measles, diarrhea, and tuberculosis (TB)—with little access to treatment.

This is not unique to Kebbi. The same situation is playing out across much of northern Nigeria, in a crisis that has been building for years—and is now at an enormous scale. 

An MSF team member measures the mid-upper arm circumference of 2-year-old Maniru at the outpatient therapeutic feeding center in the Jega local government area, Kebbi state, Nigeria.
An MSF team member measures the mid-upper arm circumference of 2-year-old Maniru at the outpatient therapeutic feeding center in the Jega local government area, Kebbi state. MSF supports the Ministry of Health in treating patients with moderate acute malnutrition while referring patients with severe acute malnutrition to the inpatient center in Maiyama. | Nigeria 2025 © Abba Adamu Musa/MSF

Children so sick they lack the energy to cry

In the emergency room and intensive care unit at the hospital, one thing struck me: The children were almost silent. Even during painful procedures like inserting an intravenous line—they didn’t have the energy to cry.

As I spoke with some of the mothers—through a translator—the same story kept coming up. Their child had fallen ill. They had tried to get care, but it was either unavailable or ineffective.

In the emergency room and intensive care unit at the hospital, one thing struck me: The children were almost silent. Even during painful procedures like inserting an intravenous line—they didn’t have the energy to cry.

One woman told me her 2-year-old son, Yakuba, had been sick with watery diarrhea and fever. Desperate, and unable to get help locally, she traveled over 50 miles to reach the MSF facility. 

Another mother told me her 1-year-old daughter, Kakamele, was born with a cleft lip and palate, making it difficult to eat. When she sought help at another hospital, she was told her daughter was too malnourished for surgery. By the time she reached our hospital, Kakamele was in such critical condition that she had to be admitted straight to the intensive care unit. 

MSF Belgium president Katrin Kisswani speaks with a mother whose child is being treated for malnutrition in the emergency room of the inpatient therapeutic feeding center in the Maiyama local government area of Kebbi state.
Kisswani speaks with a mother whose child is being treated for malnutrition in the emergency room of the inpatient therapeutic feeding center in the Maiyama local government area of Kebbi state. | Nigeria 2025 © Abba Adamu Musa/MSF

A seasonal concern has become a year-round crisis

Typically, malnutrition cases are seasonal—the numbers fall after the harvest. But in Kebbi, that’s not happening. The numbers continue to rise, and the team is having to constantly adapt. Our colleagues have built an additional inpatient facility, but it’s already over capacity. They’ve even had to stop treating children with moderate acute malnutrition because so many others are in more critical condition.

When it was time for me to leave Kebbi, I felt mixed emotions. I was immensely proud of what we had achieved. MSF’s work in Kebbi is lifesaving. But we cannot solve this crisis alone.

The painful truth is that not every child makes it home ... Some families simply don’t reach us in time.

The nutrition crisis in northern Nigeria is a public health emergency. Children are dying, the crisis is out of control, and the outlook is worsening given the cuts to international aid budgets.  

Prevention must be prioritized by the Nigerian authorities and aid organizations, with funding made available for food or cash distributions, vaccination programs, and community health centers. Supply chain issues for therapeutic food must also be urgently resolved—this treatment is essential for survival and must be available for every child who needs it. 

MSF project coordinator Huggins Madondo inspects ready-to-use therapeutic food stocks stored at MSF's medical warehouse in Birnin-Kebbi, the capital of Kebbi state.
MSF project coordinator Huggins Madondo inspects ready-to-use therapeutic food stocks stored at MSF's medical warehouse in Birnin-Kebbi, the capital of Kebbi state. Supply chain issues must be urgently resolved so this treatment can be available for every child who needs it. | Nigeria 2025 © Abba Adamu Musa/MSF

Without scaled-up assistance, this crisis could drastically worsen

MSF teams are working at their limits—often in areas where we are the only international humanitarian organization present. With the current trend, the already insufficient support could collapse entirely, and we may soon be looking at an even more catastrophic situation for the children in northern Nigeria.

Supporting these children is literally the difference between life and death. Hamida—the little girl who arrived barely conscious at the hospital—was nearly ready to go home when I met her. As I approached, a strange-looking visitor, she did what any well-nourished child might do: She took one look and screamed energetically. Her mother hugged me with joy.

Our teams are doing all they can—but we need others to act now. Every delay costs lives.

But the painful truth is that not every child makes it home. In MSF’s hospital in Maiyama, I saw another patient—a 3-year-old child, wrapped in a survival blanket, unconscious and struggling to breathe. The team was doing everything possible, but I was told the highest mortality rates occur within the first 48 hours of arrival. Some families simply don’t reach us in time.

This deadly cycle of hunger and disease is escalating across northern Nigeria. Our teams are doing all they can—but we need others to act now. Every delay costs lives.

I don’t know how to say it any more clearly: This is an emergency. 

MSF in Nigeria

MSF manages 11 inpatient therapeutic feeding centers and more than 30 outpatient therapeutic feeding centers in seven states in northeast and northwest Nigeria: Borno, Bauchi, Kano, Kebbi, Zamfara, Sokoto and Katsina.