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Building National Nutrition Coordination from the Field Up: Lessons Learnt From the Afghan Reconstruction

Building National Nutrition Coordination from the Field Up: Lessons Learnt From the Afghan Reconstruction. By Charlotte Dufour, 11th Horwitz Lecture, February 2006. Session Plan. Introduction: A few questions…

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Building National Nutrition Coordination from the Field Up: Lessons Learnt From the Afghan Reconstruction

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  1. Building National Nutrition Coordination from the Field Up: Lessons Learnt From the Afghan Reconstruction By Charlotte Dufour, 11th Horwitz Lecture, February 2006

  2. Session Plan • Introduction: A few questions… • Part 1: Building national nutrition coordination in a transition from relief to development • Part 2: Building national nutrition coordination through community and provincial-level action • Conclusion: Some thoughts and suggestions…

  3. Why Afghanistan ? • Rebuilding from scratch in a post- devastation / partial conflict situation • Intensive capacity-strengthening process, from which we can learn • Transition from Relief to • Development, with regular crises

  4. Great regional diversity

  5. The nutritional situation • Very high mortality: 26% children die before age 5 • +/- 50% of chronic malnutrition 6-10% acute malnutrition, seasonality linked to disease patterns • High rates of micronutrient deficiencies (MOPH, 2004) • Iron deficiency: ≥ 70% of children (38% anemic) and 48% of women (25% anemic) • Vitamin A (night blindness): 20% women • Vitamin C: up to 10% in some areas; scurvy epidemics 2002 & 2003

  6. Causes of malnutrition • Underlying Causes: • low diet diversity • improper feeding practices • poor hygiene & access to health services • Basic causes: • Destroyed economic, natural, physical and social capital • Limited access to land & water • Low level of education • Poor condition of women • High unemployment • Conflict and lack of governance • Etc. Chronic poverty, compounded by regular shocks

  7. Nutrition coordination… • Why? Nutrition: a sector… or a core development objective that brings together different sectors? • For whom? - For agencies and government institutions? - For donors? - For families and communities? • How?

  8. No communication Information sharing Joint planning and implementation Common strategy Coordination: How? Institutional/ formal Personal/ informal

  9. Part 1 Building national nutrition coordination in a transition from relief to development: A complex process driven by population needs and institutional agendas…

  10. 2002: Establishment of Interim Govern’t 2005 - 2006 : Parliamentary elections; London Conf & ANDS 2003-2004 Presidential elections Establish’t of gov’t 2007: ANDS 1996-2001 : Taliban Emergency Transition Development (with regular crises) Food aid SFC/TFC in Kabul, Herat & IDP camps. Small-scale agricultural projects Large increase in food aid (drought, IDPs, returnees.) and SFCs Some TFCs Food security interventions Integrated Public Nutrition approach USI Integration of TFCs in provincial hospitals; IYCF; supplementation in BPHS; community-based food security interventions flour fortification; nutrition education integrated in various programs Punctual relief interventions: targeted food aid “No” gov’t agencies; Few NGOs; UN in Islamabad Arrival of NGOs, UN & donors Public Nutrition Depart in MOPH MOPH Public Nutrition Strategy Capacity-strengthening of MOPH PND; some in MoAg and MRRD CB cont’d, but end of Tufts support Nutrition not in ANDS: National Action Plan for Nutrition??? Coordination easy Active coordination: Nutrition Task Force; 6 working groups Some working groups stop; coordination less active ↑↑??

  11. Evolving government and donor priorities Emergencies: Key outcome = survival & nutritional status Type of aid: project support through grants Target groups & areas: the most vulnerable & poorest Development: Key outcome = economic growth Type of aid: budgetary support through grants & loans Target groups & areas: ‘enterpreneurs’ & productive areas or politically important Obj: to address malnutrition & food insecurity But how is food security defined?

  12. Evolving government structures and capacities • Low capacity, esp. at provincial level • Evolving government structures, varying importance and unclear relationships • Inter-ministerial competition • High staff turnover • Public Nutrition Unit in MOPH → difficult to coordinate and influence other ministries → Coordination relies on key individuals

  13. The costs of coordination • Time costs: when do we do technical / field work?! • Difficulty of coordinating workplans → delays in action • No resources for coordination (tea & sweets, internet…) Coordination is seen as essential… But not a funding priority!

  14. Inadequate availability and use of information • Information for advocacy • Information for planning at district and community levels • Information to document and capitalize on lessons learnt

  15. National nutrition coordination is fragile… What can we do to strengthen it?

  16. Part 2 Building national coordination by mainstreaming nutrition in household, provincial and central level action: Some tools and examples

  17. The key to success: 2 way coordination Health Agriculture Rural devt Education Economy & social affairs Etc. Central authorities Local knowledge, information & experience Policy & technical support Provincial Depart. Communities Families

  18. Integrating nutrition in local development FAO & Aga Khan Foundation Collaboration in Bamyan Province

  19. Integrate sectors through malnutrition problem & solution trees

  20. Integrate nutrition education in community activities • CHWs • Literacy classes • Child to child learning • Community Play

  21. Communities design their own nutrition project • Livestock group for women • Wells • Nutrition education through CHWs and child-to-child learning • Greenhouses

  22. Initial Results • Nutrition ‘demystified’ • Staff and families’ motivation and confidence to address malnutrition enhanced • Integration of sectors supported • Increased effectiveness / impact of existing resources → Plan to use nutrition at provincial level to strengthen integration of AKF activities

  23. CONCLUSION What recommendations can we harvest from the Afghan experience? Mainstreaming Nutrition to support integrated and people-centered development

  24. No communication Information sharing Joint planning and implementation Common strategy Coordination… how? ? Without shared objectives, and a shared understanding of people’s needs, we cannot go beyond information sharing!

  25. Find the balance between benefits and costs… • Define clear & realistic objectives / expectations • Prioritize • Estimate & allocate resources • Advocate

  26. Strengthen capacity for an integrated nutrition approach • A common capacity-building strategy, to build ownership of nutrition across sectors • Capacity-building efforts at all levels: • family • community • provincial • National • Common nutrition education strategy

  27. We need donor commitment to… • Integrate pro-poor strategies in economic development (twin-track approach) • Provide sustained and long-term funding for capacity-development for nutrition • Support civil service reform (salaries) • Support coordination • Allow flexibility in programme design and implementation

  28. Adapt information and planning methods • Understand the causality of malnutrition at household and community level • Use available information for advocacy • Integrate flexibility in national planning to accommodate regional variations and evolutions • Invest in communication between community, provincial and national-levels • Capitalise on and use lessons learnt

  29. And, most importantly…

  30. Have fun and do lots of field visits! The only way to ensurepeopleare at the heart of our work!

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