Title: Nutrition Surveillance: An effective tool in Nutrition Policy
1Nutrition Surveillance An effective tool in
Nutrition Policy
- Chantell Witten
- Country Director
- 2 April 2007
2Background
- Bangladesh has one of the highest malnutrition
rates in the world - Relationship between expenditure and malnutrition
in Bangladesh is not as strong as in other
developing countries - GOB and DPs invested large sums of money to
tackle malnutrition but the progress needs to be
accelerated - Among households in wealthiest quintile (5th) the
level of malnutrition is still high
(IFPRI/DFID-B, 2004 HKI, 2006) - One of the key gaps lack of in-depth data and
analysis for formulating nutrition
policies/program (IFPRI/DFID-B, 2004) - Surveillance offers more than survey data for
appropriate policy and action (intervention)
3Modified from WB,2004
Income Poverty
Low Food Intake
Frequent Infections
Hard physical labour
Frequent pregnancies
Large families
Malnutrition
Indirect loss in productivity from poor cognitive
development and schooling
Direct loss in productivity form poor physical
status
Indirect loss in productivity from poor cognitive
development and schooling
Loss in resources from increased health care
costs of ill-health
Loss in resources from increased health care
costs of ill-health
Direct loss in productivity from poor physical
status
4Types of malnutrition
45,7
11,1
39,2
Multiple micronutrient deficiencies
Chronic energy deficiency
5Malnutrition in Bangladesh
- Addressing malnutrition is core to the
development agenda - Malnutrition in Bangladesh is a problem of
- food insecurity
- low diet diversity
- poor health and water sanitation status
- Poverty is underlying each of these
- High levels of malnutrition is still evident even
amongst the wealthiest 20
6Role of nutrition and health surveillance
- Track progress towards national and international
targets, including health, nutrition and poverty. - Facilitate to design, monitor and evaluate
policies and programs to improve health and
nutrition. - Assess coverage and impact of programs among
certain population groups and/or the general
population. - Formulate advocacy material to obtain support for
development efforts. - Assess the scale of malnutrition and examine
determinants of malnutrition.
7Nutritional Surveillance Project
- Nationally and Divisionally representative sample
- 16-year data set on the health and nutritional
status of women and children in Bangladesh - Richest source of urban slum data in the world
- Data was collected every 2 months to capture
seasonal trends, a year starts with the
February-March round ending Dec-January - Was in collaboration with IPHN (under the MOHFW)
and local NGOs - High-quality evidence based outputs
8Scope of indicators collected
- Health and nutrition data of under-fives and
mothers - SES and demographic data of the household
- Health care utilization
- Crisis impact and coping
- Agricultural practices
- NNP participation
- Adolescents basic information
- Tobacco survey
- Village level information (prices, distances to
certain institutions)
9Rajshahi
Sylhet
Dhaka
Map of NSP data collection areas
Chittagong
Khulna
Barisal
10Sampling of the NSP
- Sampling scheme is nationally and divisionally
representative since 1998 (rural sample). - Rural NSP (38 thana)
- Each division 4 thana x6 24 thana, 9000 HH
- CHT 4 thana, 1500 HH
- NNP BINP 5 thana x2 10 thana, 3000 HH
- Urban NSP (6 divisional cities)
- Urban slums only
- Sample size proportionate to city size overall
1500 HH - Overall sample size 13,500 (rural) 1,500
(urban) - ? 15,000 HH every 2 months
11Trends of underweight among rural Bangladeshi
children, from 1990 to 2005
(n 909,178)
WHO threshold for 'very high prevalence
WHO threshold for 'high prevalence
Even well above very high cut off
Moderate (weight-for-age Z-score lt-2SD to
3SD), Severe (weight-for-age Z-score lt-3SD)
Error bars represent 95 confidence intervals
12Trends of stunting among rural Bangladeshi
children, from 1990 to 2005
(n 914,918)
WHO threshold for 'very high prevalence
WHO threshold for 'high prevalence
Moderate (height-for-age Z-score lt-2SD to
3SD), Severe (height-for-age Z-score lt-3SD)
Error bars represent 95 confidence intervals
13Reduction in prevalence of underweight by
expenditure quintiles, 1998 to 2005
(n 61,245)
(n 62,956)
Larger Decline in wealthiest group, still very
high prevalence
WHO threshold for 'very high prevalence
Error bars represent confidence intervals
14Child growth Stunting and its relation to SES
- Stunting
- Short stature for the childs age (height-for-age
indicator) - 39 children aged 0-59 months are stunted
- 45 children aged 0-59 months are underwt
- Very strong inverse relationship with SES
- As the area of the house or the level of maternal
- education increase, child stunting decreases
- dramatically.
15Average child height-for-age Z-score (6-59m) by
mothers number of years of formal education
(1990-2000, n547 327)
MW Bloem et al. 2004. Trends in health and
nutrition indicators in the urban slums of three
cities in Bangladesh, compared to its rural
areas. FAO Food and Nutrition Paper No. 83, FAO,
Rome.
16Prevalence of child stunting in MHH and FHH by
expenditure quintile in rural Bangladesh
17Child anemia prevalence in rural Bangladesh in
2001 and 2004
18Prevalence of night blindness among children
(12-59 mo) who had not received VAC by home
garden and poultry ownership
(Kiess et al., submitted for publication)
19(No Transcript)
20Child underweight and the weekly per capita
expenditure on rice
Torlesse et al. 2003, J Nutr 1331320-1325
21The Nutrition Sufficiency Ratio (NSR)
- To assess whether the amount of money spent on
food was sufficient to purchase foods that would
provide an optimal diet according to 100 of RDA
for key nutrients - NSR gt 1 HH spends enough money on food to
be able to purchase an optimal diet - NSR lt 1 HH spends insufficient money on
food - to be able to purchase an optimal diet
22Prevalence of stunting for different levels of
the Nutrition Sufficiency Ratio (n73,933)
23Proportion of total expenditure that households
spent on foods and on animal foods (n62,920)
24Treatment seeking behavior for child sickness by
expenditure quintiles
25Micronutrient supplementation coverage among
mothers in rural and urban poor areas of
Bangladesh in 2004
26The WORLD BANK MDG REPORT, 2005
- . . . the importance of systematically
monitoring MD outcomes at disaggregated levels
and evaluating the impact of public programs
cannot be overemphasized. There is a paucity of
reliable, time-series data on most MD indicators
at the district and sub-district levels.
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