Nutrition Research: Measuring Outcomes in the Field Scott Bleggi, Senior International Policy...
Transcript of Nutrition Research: Measuring Outcomes in the Field Scott Bleggi, Senior International Policy...
Nutrition Research: Measuring
Outcomes in the Field
Scott Bleggi,Senior International Policy Analyst
for Hunger and Nutrition
www.bread.org
Bread for the World Institute:
…provides policy analysis on hunger and strategies to end
it. The Institute educates opinion leaders, policy makers, and the public about hunger in the United States and abroad. Bread for the World Institute is
a 501(c)3 organization.
Reduce Stunting/Wasted/Underweight ……..–% Change in prevalence of stunted
children under five years of age–% Change in prevalence of wasted
children under five years of age–% Change in prevalence of underweight
women
What are nutrition outcomes?
What are direct versus indirect nutrition interventions?
Direct nutrition interventions are “nutrition-specific” (13), and address the more immediate determinants of undernutrition like quality of diet and access to individual health services.
They can be put in three main categories: •increasing the intake of vitamins and minerals•providing therapeutic feeding for undernourished children, and•promoting good nutritional practices
Sumner at al., (2007) : Donors’ perception of nutrition affects how they fund related programming. If it is deemed a ‘supporting’ investment rather than a ‘foundational’ one, then it is assigned a lower priority.
What are direct versus indirect nutrition interventions?
Indirect interventions are “nutrition-sensitive”, and address the underlying determinants of undernutrition
These can include:•Food availability•Water and sanitation issues
And they can be part of multi-sector programs like food security, education and health
ACF (2012) reports that funding for indirect nutrition interventions is 5X greater than for direct nutrition interventions.
What’s the ideal balance to ideally reduce undernutrition globally?
How important are nutrition-specific interventions?
Undernutrition accounts
for 33%
In a Decade, Nutrition Initiatives are Moving Beyond the Focus on Low Calorie Intake:
• World Bank and Ashworth (2006) and the Lancet Maternal and Child Undernutrition series (Black et al., 2008) identify interventions to improve health and nutrition outcomes in countries with highest burden
• FAO, WHO and UNICEF “Renewed Efforts Against Child Hunger and Undernutrition (REACH) suggests scaling up child undernutriton interventions through coordinated action
• Copenhagen Consensus Challenge Paper (Martorell et al., 2008): achieving education, child mortality, and maternal health goals, combatting diseases all “depend crucially on nutrition”
• President Obama addresses global hunger in his inaugural address, and countries pledge $22 billion over three years
• G8 countries endorse the Muskoka Initiative (2010) focus on improved nutrition, safe water and sanitation to reduce maternal and child morbidity
• SUN and the 1000 Days Partnership promote targeted action and investment to improve nutrition in women and children
• The May 2012 G8 meeting will mention the importance of nutrition
The multi-stakeholder Scaling Up Nutrition movement was launched in 2009 and has gained momentum globally since its “Framework for Action” policy document was launched advocating targeted action and investment to improve nutrition for mothers and children in the critical 1000-day period.
It proposes direct and indirect (across sector) nutrition interventions and encourages partnerships between donors, businesses, CSOs and governments.
BirthPregnancy Infancy Childhood Adolescence Adulthood
Nutrition Throughout the Life Cycle
High ImpactPregnancy until 2 years old
Micronutrient Supplements
• Vitamin A• Iron-Folate• Zinc
Malaria Prevention using Insecticide
Treated Nets
Breastfeeding Promotion & Infant and Young Child
Feeding (including complementary feeding)
Improve Hygiene and SanitationUniversal Salt
Iodization
Zinc Mgmt of Diarrhea
Deworming
Treatment of severe undernutrition with
RUTF
Community Management of Acute Malnutrition (CMAM)
Improved Nutritional Value of Food
• Better quality crops
• Household Dietary Diversity
• Fortification
Increase household dietary diversity (& address hidden hunger) using quality, nutrient-rich local foods
Key to Prevention: Improving Nutritional Quality of Food
Production and distribution of more nutritious staple crops, biofortified with vitamin A, iron, or zinc•Biofortification•Value-Chain assistance•Fortified crops•Kitchen/homestead gardening
Production Consumption Increase income, gender equity &
ability to eat more nutritious foods
• Reduce poverty• Increase calorie intake
Collecting Evidence-based Nutrition Outcomes
• Important to provide feedback to home offices, other Implementing Partners, USAID and USDA
• Will enable the best possible, targeted program and policy decisions to be made
• Recognize nutrition’s importance across development sectors: Disaster Assistance Food Security Agricultural Livelihoods Value Chain Improvements Global Health
Questions in The Lancet Maternal and Child Undernutrition series remain: is enough money being invested? Is the money being invested at the right time? Is it reaching those most affected by undernutrition?
The answers start with measuring nutrition outcomes in the field!
Thank You!
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