Two-year-old Shaina is hooked up to an intravenous drip at one of the few functioning hospitals in Haiti's capital, Port-au-Prince. Her mother, Venda, desperately hopes it will alleviate the acute malnutrition the emaciated young girl is suffering from.
Shaina is one of 760,000 children who are on the brink of famine in Haiti.
Terrified of the gang warfare raging in her neighbourhood, for weeks Venda was too frightened to leave her home to seek treatment for her daughter.
Now that she has made it to the paediatric ward, she hopes it is not too late for Shaina.
"I want to get proper care for my child, I don't want to lose her," she says tearfully.
Haiti has been engulfed in a wave of gang violence since the assassination in 2021 of the then-president, Jovenel Moïse, and now an estimated 85% of the capital is under gang control.
Even inside the hospital, Haitians are not safe from the fighting, which the UN says has killed 5,000 people this year alone and left the country on the verge of collapse.
The hospital's medical director explains that the previous day, police clashed with gang members in the emergency ward among terrified patients.
The victims of the violence are everywhere. One ward is full of young men with gunshot wounds.
Pierre is one of them.