Caravn of mules
Hope on the last mile
In Nepal’s remote west, Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Food supplied with support from the US Government and UNICEF is helping children with severe acute malnutrition recover closer to home
Dolpa, Nepal: In the high mountains of Dolpa, where roads give way to narrow foot trails and the landscape opens into steep cliffs, windswept valleys and snow-bright ridgelines, almost everything has to travel a long way to reach the communities scattered across the district. This includes Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Food, or RUTF, a lifesaving treatment for children with severe acute malnutrition.
On some stretches, boxes of RUTF move by vehicle. Beyond the roads, they are carried along mountain paths, past stone settlements and open slopes, over terrain where every turn depends on weather, distance and the sure footing of animals and people.
Supporting this last-mile effort, the US Government has provided 10,000 cartons of RUTF to the Government of Nepal through UNICEF. The supplies were handed over to the Government’s Central Medical Store in Pathlaiya before being dispatched through provincial and district health systems to communities based on need.
“Logistically, getting these to such remote districts is tough,” says UNICEF Nutrition Officer Sher Singh Dahit. “In some places, vehicles are used, but in others, we have to rely on mules.”
For 27-year-old Lalkumari Ukheda, who lives in Dolpa’s Tripurasundari Municipality, that journey became deeply personal when health workers identified her youngest son, 21-month-old Nirajan, as severely acutely malnourished. Lalkumari has three children, and she says Nirajan had struggled from birth.
“When he was born, he only weighed 1 kg,” she says. “I exclusively breastfed him for the first six months, and after that we tried giving him porridge and other foods, but he still didn’t improve.”
During regular community visits, health workers and Female Community Health Volunteers check children’s growth by measuring their weight, height and mid-upper arm circumference. It was through this process that Nirajan’s condition was confirmed, and Lalkumari was advised to start him on RUTF.
UNICEF Nepal/2026/RUpadhayay
“We have been giving it to him for around a week now....The health worker said he is already showing some improvement compared to before. She told me to keep feeding it to him.”
RUTF is a ready-to-eat therapeutic paste packed with essential nutrients. Because it does not need cooking or refrigeration, children without medical complications can receive treatment close to home instead of being admitted to a health facility.
At the local health post in Tripurasundari Municipality, Senior Auxiliary Health Worker Sirjana Rokaya says each referred child is reassessed before treatment begins.
“When a child is referred from the village, we reassess their height, weight and MUAC status,” Sirjana explains. “Then we conduct an appetite test and counsel mothers on hand hygiene, cleanliness and packet sanitation before starting the treatment.” Children who can eat and have no severe medical complications are enrolled in outpatient therapeutic care and asked to return every seven days for follow-up.
The child, who once weighed about 6 kg at 11 months, began steadily gaining weight after treatment. Now nearly three, he eats rice, lentils, vegetable curry and seasonal fruits like mangoes and bananas.
“He’s doing great now,” Hari says.
For Lalkumari, of course, it is still early. Nirajan has only just started treatment, and she knows she will need to return regularly for follow-up supplies. But after months of worry, the first signs of improvement have given her hope. Health workers have also counselled her on feeding her other children nutritious foods such as green vegetables, eggs, milk and yogurt, and on maintaining hygiene at home.
In Dolpa, where distance and terrain can place essential services far from families, each packet of RUTF reflects the work of many hands: support from the US Government that helps make supplies available, government systems that move them through the health network, UNICEF’s support to reach remote areas, health workers who identify and treat children, and families who continue care at home.
For children like Nirajan and Kishor, that partnership can mean the chance to recover, grow stronger and continue childhood with better health.