"policy_id","iso3code","countryname","province","policy_title","policy_type","policy_type_other","language","start_month","start_year","end_month","end_year","published_by","published_month","published_year","adopted","adopted_month","adopted_year","adopted_by","partner_gov","partner_government_details","partner_un","partner_un_details","partner_ngo","partner_ngo_details","partner_donors","partner_donors_details","partner_intergov","partner_intgov_details","partner_national_ngo","partner_nat_ngo_details","partner_research","partner_research_details","partner_private","partner_private_details","partner_other","partner_other_details","goals","strategies","me_indicators","me_indicator_types","legislation_details","topics","link_action","url","further_notes","references","attached_file"
"24713","SEN","Senegal","","Plan Stratégique pour la Fortification des Aliments en Micronutriments au Sénégal (PSFAMS)","Nutrition policy, strategy or plan focusing on specific nutrition areas","","French","","2006","","2011","","6","2006","","","","","Health|Food and agriculture|Education and research|Social welfare|Finance, budget and planning|Development|Trade|Industry|Information","Institut de Technologie Alimentaire (ITA), Association Sénégalaise de Normalisation (ASN)","United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)|World Food Programme (WFP)|World Health Organization (WHO)","","Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN)|Helen Keller International (HKI)|Other|World Vision International","ABT ASSOCIATES","US Agency for International Development (USAID)","","","","National NGOs","OSDIL, CONGAD, UNAFA.","Research/academia","Université Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar : Faculté de Médecine et Pharmacie etEquipe de Nutrition de la Faculté des Sciences et Techniques.","Private sector","Conseil National des Employeurs du Senegal, Syndicat Patronal des Industries Alimentaires (SPIDS), Société Nationale des Oléagineux du Sénégal (SONACOS), Grands Moulins de Dakar (GMD),Nouvelles Minoteries de l’Afrique (NMA), Nestlé Sénégal, Sosagrin, Oasis International, Mamelles Jaboot, Sonia, SelSine, Sedima, Eurogerm","Other","l’Association Nationale des Consommateurs du Sénégal (ASCOSEN), l’Union Nationale des Consommateurs du Sénégal (UNCS), SOS-consommateurs","
2. OBJECTIF GLOBAL DU PROGRAMME
L’objectif global du programme est de contribuer à améliorer la santé des populations pour la survie et le développement humain durable
3. BUT DU PROGRAMME
Le but du programme est de réduire les prévalences des carences en micronutriments (fer, vitamine A, iode), chez les femmes en âge de procréer et chez les enfants de moins de 5 ans, au bout des 5 prochaines années.
4. OBJECTIFS SPECIFIQUES
En termes d’objectifs spécifiques, le programme se propose de :
- Réduire de 30% les prévalences de la carence en fer chez les femmes en âge de procréer et chez les enfants de moins de 5 ans, au bout des 5 prochaines années.
- Eliminer la carence en vitamine A chez les femmes en âge de procréer et chez les enfants de moins de 5 ans, au bout des 5 prochaines années.
- Eliminer les troubles dus à la carence en iode chez les femmes en âge de procréer et chez les enfants de moins de 5 ans, au bout des 5 prochaines années.
","5. 1. Enrichissement en fer et vitamine A des aliments dont la technologie est bien maitrisée
5. 2 Accélération de l’iodation du sel et utilisation des acquis comme référence pour les autres micronutriments
5.3 – Partenariat
","See document table ANNEX1, pages 33-43
","","Outcome indicators|Process indicators","Iodine deficiency disorders|Vitamin A deficiency|Vitamin A|Wheat flours","","","","","https://extranet.who.int/nutrition/gina/sites/default/filesstore/SEN%202006%20Plan%20Strat%C3%A9gique%20pour%20la%20Fortification.pdf"
"11506","BGD","Bangladesh","","National Food Policy Plan of Action","Food security or agriculture sector national policy, strategy or plan with nutrition components","","","","2008","","2015","Food Planning and Monitoring Unit (FPMU) Ministry of Food and Disaster Management","","2008","Adopted","","2008","Food Planning and Monitoring Committee","Cabinet/Presidency|Education and research|Environment|Finance, budget and planning|Food and agriculture|Health|Industry|Information|Nutrition council|Other|Social welfare|Sub-national|Women, children, families","Food Planning and Monitoring Unit (FPMU) Ministry of Food and Disaster Management Cabinet/Presidency, Education and research, Environment, Finance, budget and planning, Food and agriculture, Health, Industry, Information, Nutrition council, Social welfare","World Health Organization (WHO)|World Food Programme (WFP)|Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO)","","Helen Keller International (HKI)","International NGOs: Helen Keller International (HKI) & National NGOs: Association of Development Agencies in Bangladesh","US Agency for International Development (USAID)","","","","National NGOs","","Research/academia","","","","Other","","Goal:
Ensure a dependable sustained food security for all people at all times
Core Objective 1: Adequate and stable supply of safe and nutritious food
Specific Objectives:
1. Sustained increase in food production
2. Efficient food markets
3. Non-distortionary food grain market intervention for price stabilization
Targets:
- Demand-driven crop and non crop new technologies developed and disseminated; demand led and pro-poor extension service expanded
- Increased irrigation coverage; improved delivery and efficient use of safe irrigation water; reduced dependency on ground water; reduced cost of irrigation water
- Increased supply of quality crop and non-crop seeds, timely supply of fertilizers and balanced use of fertilizers; Increased efficiency and sustainability of agricultural land use; Agricultural land use for non- agricultural purposes effectively regulated; Agricultural machines and equipment available at affordable prices; strengthened Integrated Pest Management (IPM) and Integrated Crop Management (ICP)
- Increased and well-managed production of high value crops, fish and livestock products.
- Increased formal credit to agriculture, especially to small and marginal farmers; improved coverage of financial loss due to failure of crops, livestock and fish production.
- Improved private storage, market and transportation facilities, improved market connectivity at local, national and international levels
- Reduced marketing costs of agricultural products, strengthened market integration
- Updated legislation regulating food markets enacted and enforced
- Well-functioning domestic Early Warning System established and integrated/ coordinated with the global Early Warning System
- Enhanced effectiveness of the public procurement system; producer price effectively supported during post harvest seasons
- Improved public stock management, adequate public storage facilities and capacities and enhanced effectiveness of OMS
Core Objective 2: Increased purchasing power and access to food of the people
Specific objectives:
1. (Effective) Transitory shock management
2. Effective implementation of targeted programmes to improve food security
3. Employment generating income growth
Targets:
- Enhanced disaster preparedness and post-disaster rehabilitation in agricultural systems.
- Improved coverage and effectiveness of emergency distribution programmes.
- Improved coverage of vulnerable and disadvantaged people and areas (esp. Monga-prone areas); improved targeting; improved cost- effectiveness; reduced leakage; enhanced adequacy to vulnerable people’s nutritional needs.
- Enhanced participation of women and disabled people in rural agricultural and other rural activities
- Increased growth of agro-based/agro-processing industries and Micro, Small and Medium sized Enterprises (MSMEs)
- Quality of technical and vocational education and training (TVET) increased to meet skill requirements of domestic and international markets
Core Objective 3: Adequate nutrition for all individuals, especially women and children
Specific Objectives:
1. Long-term national plan for ensuring balanced food in building a healthy nation
2. Supply of sufficient nutritious food for vulnerable groups
3. Balanced diet containing adequate micronutrients
4. Safe drinking water and improved sanitation
5. Safe quality and food supply
6. Adequate health status
Targets:
- Long term targets for physical growth established; standard food and nutrient intake established for different population groups; integrated plan for attaining standard food intakes targets established
- Increased availability through local production of low-cost items; poor, distressed and vulnerable women and children effectively covered by food-based nutrition programs, including Growth Monitoring and Promotion (GMP).
- Increased percentage of women educated in nutrition and primary health care activities through formal and non-formal education; increased home gardening and poultry raising activities by poor households
- Increased coverage of vitamin A; increased coverage and compliance of ironfolate supplementation and; increased coverage of households with adequately iodized salt
- Safe water and sanitation facilities available and accessible for all by 2010.
- Enhanced access to safe and quality food, for domestic consumption and also for international trade.
- Increased primary health care (PHC) and antenatal care (ANC) coverage; increased skilled attendance at birth; improved access to health services; healthy lifestyles and behavior.
- Strengthened exclusive breastfeeding practices; expanded practice of breastfeeding; ensured safe and nutritious complementary feeding; strengthened babyfriendly hospital initiative; increased maternity leave, particularly post-partum; Breast Milk Substitutes (BMS) Codes respected by the breast milk substitute marketers.
","Key areas of intervention/Program areas:
1.1: Agricultural Research and Extension
1.2: Use and Management of Water Resources
1.3: Adequate Supply and Sustainable Use of Agricultural Inputs
1.4: Agricultural Diversification
1.5: Agricultural Credit and Insurance
1.6: Physical Market Infrastructure Development
1.7: Agricultural Marketing and Trade
1.8: Policy and Regulatory Environment
1.9: Early Warning System Development
1.10: Producer Price Support
1.11: Public Stock Management / Price Stabilization
2.1: Agricultural Disaster Management
2.2: Emergency Distribution from Public Stock
2.3: Enabling Environment for Private Food Trade and Stock
2.4: Effectiveness of Targeted Food Security Programs and Other Safety Nets
2.5: Income Generation for Women and the Disabled
2.6: Promotion of Agro-based/Agro-processing and Micro/Small Rural Enterprises
2.7: Market-driven Skill Development
3.1: Long-term Planning for Balanced Nutrition
3.2: Balanced and Nutritious Food at Minimal Costs for Vulnerable Groups
3.3: Nutrition Education for Dietary Diversification
3.4: Supplementation and Fortification for Balanced Nutrition
3.5: Safe Drinking Water and Improved Sanitation
3.6: Safe, Quality Food Supply
3.7: Women and Children’s Health
3.8: Promotion and Protection of Breastfeeding and Complementary Feeding
","Goal - Outcome-target indicators:
WFS (number of undernourished people) – Target: reduced from 39.3 million (1990-1992) to 19.65 by 2015
MDG (prevalence of undernourished) – Target: reduced from 35% (1990-2002) to 17.5 % by 2015
Objective 1 - Outcome/impact indicators:
Availability/Adequacy of supply: Agricultural GDP; food supply (domestic production, net imports, variation in stocks) compared to national requirements, food production and consumption requirements disaggregated by regions
Stability of supply: Variability of food production; food import dependency ratio, variability of food prices
Objective 2 - Outcome/Impact Indicators:
Proportion of people below the poverty line – MDG1 Target: Reduced proportion of people below US$1 per day (PPP) from 58.8% in 1991 to 29.4% by 2015
Proportion of people in extreme poverty – MDG1 Target: Proportion of people in extreme poverty reduced from 28% in 1991 to 14% by 2015
% increase in average HH cash income from on-farm and off-farm income generating activities
# HH with no food gap – have sufficient food to meet HH needs in all 12months of the year
# income sources per HH
% of HH income spent on food
Food price index; variability in food price
Objective 3 - Related Outcome/Impact indicators/Targets:
Low Birth Weight (Birth wt. <2.5 kg) – Target: reduced from 36% (2004) to 30% by 2010 and < 20% by 2015
Weight gain during pregnancy – Target: increased from 6.7 kg (2004) to 9-10 kg by 2010 and 11-12 kg by 2015
U-5 underweight (weight for age <-2SD) – Target: reduced from 51% (2000) to 38% by 2010 and 33% by 2015
U-5 stunting (height for age <-2SD) – Target: reduced from 49% (2000) to 37% by 2010 and 33% by 2015
U-5 wasting (Weight for height <-2SD) – Target: reduced from 12% (2000) to 10% by 2010and 7% by 2015
Rural-urban difference in U-5 (PEM) – Target: reduced from 10-12% point (2000) to 7-8% points by 2010 and 5-6% points by 2015
Chronic Energy Deficiency (CED) (Body Mass Index (BMI) <18.5 kg/m2) in women (including adolescent girls) – Target: reduced from 45% (2000) to 20% by 2010 and <20% by 2015
Vitamin A deficiency among children and women – Target: reduced from 30% (2000) to 15% by 2010 and to <10% by 2015
Iodine deficiency in children (6-12 years) and women (15-44 years) – Target: reduced from 34-38% (2005) to 25% by 2010 and to <10% by 2015
Iron deficiency anaemia (IDA) – Target: in infants (6-11 months), reduced from 77% (2003) to 60% by 2010 and to 40% by 2015; in adolescent girls (13-19 years) from 30% (2003) to 25% by 2010 and <20% by 2015; in pregnant women from 46% (2003) to 35% by 2010 and to 25% by 2015
Anthropometric indicators: height and weight of under-5 children – Target: increased to at least 80% of WHO standards by 2015
Others:
Per capita calorie intake – Target: Increased from 2238 (BBS, 2006) to 2400 (kcal/person/day)(provisional) by 2015
Dietary energy supply (DES) from cereals (%) – Target: decreased from the current 70% to 60% by 2015
Prevalence of food contamination and food adulteration (physical, chemical, microbiological) (%)
Incidence of food-borne illnesses (number of cases reported)
","","","Baby-friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI)|International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes|Maternity protection|Low birth weight|Stunting in children 0-5 yrs|Wasting in children 0-5 years|Underweight in children 0-5 years|Underweight in women|Anaemia|Anaemia in adolescent girls|Anaemia in pregnant women|Iodine deficiency disorders|Vitamin A deficiency|Maternal, infant and young child nutrition|Growth monitoring and promotion|Breastfeeding promotion/counselling|Complementary feeding promotion/counselling|Nutrition in schools|School gardens|Promotion of healthy diet and prevention of obesity and diet-related NCDs|Dietary guidelines|Food-based dietary guidelines (FBDG)|Media campaigns on healthy diets and nutrition|Nutrition counselling on healthy diets|Vitamin and mineral nutrition|Vitamin A|Micronutrient supplementation|Micronutrient powder for home fortification|Food vehicles (i.e. types of fortified foods)|Staple foods|Complementary foods|Acute malnutrition|Food distribution/supplementation for prevention of acute malnutrition|Management of severe acute malnutrition|Nutrition and infectious disease|Nutrition sensitive actions|Food security and agriculture|Health related|Conditional cash transfer programmes","","","","WHO 2nd Global Nutrition Policy Review 2016-2017","https://extranet.who.int/nutrition/gina/sites/default/filesstore/BGD%202008NationalFoodPolicyPlanofActionFINAL.pdf"
"39482","CIV","Côte d'Ivoire","","Politique nationale de nutrition","Comprehensive national nutrition policy, strategy or plan","","French","","2010","","","Ministère de la santé et de l’hygiène publique","","2010","Adopted","","","Ministère de la santé et de l’hygiène publique","Nutrition council|Health|Food and agriculture|Education and research|Women, children, families|Social welfare|Finance, budget and planning|Development|Sport|Transport|Consumer affairs|Trade|Environment|Industry|Information|Other","Ministère des infrastructures économiques","Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO)|United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)|World Health Organization (WHO)","","Action Against Hunger (AAH) / Action contre la faim (ACF)|Helen Keller International (HKI)","","Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC USA)","","","","National NGOs","associations de consommateurs","","","Private sector","","","","VI. BUT
Contribuer à l’amélioration de l’état de santé de la population en lui assurant un bon état nutritionnel à travers une meilleure adéquation entre l’offre de soins et la couverture des besoins nutritionnels.
OBJECTIF GENERAL
Améliorer l’état nutritionnel de la population, en particulier des groupes les plus vulnérables notamment les enfants, les femmes en âge de reproduction, les PVVIH, les OEV et ceux issus des situations de crise, d’urgence et des catastrophes naturelles.
La stratégie globale vise à :
- Promouvoir l’habilitation des populations cibles à améliorer leur situation nutritionnelle et de santé ;
- Renforcer les systèmes de coordination à tous les niveaux ;
- Promouvoir l’engagement des autorités nationales, régionales, locales et traditionnelles ;
- Accorder la priorité aux stratégies préventives dans la lutte contre la malnutrition, notamment du nourrisson et du jeune enfant ;
","VII. AXES STRATEGIQUES POUR L’AMELIORATION DE LA NUTRITION
A. N°1 : Prise en charge de la malnutrition (Déficit & Excès)
1. Au niveau des structures de santé
- Promotion de l’extension des Unités Nutritionnelles (UNT, UNTA, UNS) pour la prise en charge des cas de malnutrition sévère, modérée, surtout dans les zones d’insécurité alimentaire ;
- Suivi des enfants sortis des UNTA/CNS au niveau des sites communautaires;
- Mise en place d’un système de référence et de contre référence ;
- Organisation des stratégies avancées pour le dépistage et le traitement ;
- Introduction de la supplémentation en zinc dans le schéma de prise en charge de la diarrhée chez les enfants;
- Promotion du suivi et de la croissance des enfants de 0-5 ans dans les centres de santé et centres sociaux;
- Renforcement de l’intégration des interventions nutritionnelles aux autres programmes de santé maternelle et infantile (déparasitage, Prévention de la Transmission Parents Enfant (PTPE), supplémentation en fer et acide folique, traitement présomptif intensif du paludisme des femmes enceintes, vitamine A, PEV, PF, …) en adoptant l’approche « Actions Essentielles en Nutrition » ;
- Promotion l’utilisation des aliments fortifiés localement pour la récupération des enfants modérément malnutris ;
- Mise en œuvre du protocole national de prise en charge de la malnutrition
- Promotion de l’Alimentation du Nourrisson et du Jeune Enfant (ANJE) : Promotion et protection de l’allaitement exclusif des nourrissons de la naissance jusqu’à six mois, y compris les nourrissons nés de mères séropositives qui ne peuvent pas remplir les conditions à moindre risque d’alimentation de remplacement ; Promotion de l’allaitement continu jusqu’à vingt-quatre mois ou plus, avec une alimentation de complément appropriée à l’âge de l’enfant à partir de six mois;
- Promotion de l’allaitement Maternel par la redynamisation des « Hôpitaux Amis des Bébés (IHAB) » en vu de décerner un label;
- Promotion des bonnes pratiques nutritionnelles ;
- Promotion de l’exercice physique ;
- Promotion de régimes et pratiques alimentaires adéquats et des modes de vie sains contre les excès alimentaires.
2. Au niveau communautaire
- Prise en charge et suivre au niveau des sites communautaires les enfants sortis des UNTA/CNS ;
- Institutionnalisation de la semaine d’intensification des activités de nutrition au niveau communautaire couplée à des campagnes de dépistage de la malnutrition en stratégie avancée dans les zones à forte prévalence ;
- Mise en oeuvre de l’approche FARN (Foyer d’Animation et de Réhabilitation nutritionnelle qui utilise la « Déviance Positive » pour l’amélioration de la qualité et de l’efficacité des prestations au niveau communautaire;
- Intensification de la prévention de la malnutrition saisonnière (soudure) due à l’insécurité alimentaire et aux maladies infectieuses (maladies diarrhéiques, infections respiratoires aiguës, rougeole et paludisme).
- Soutien des suppléments alimentaires aux groupes vulnérables (enfants, femmes enceintes et allaitantes) ;
- Renforcement du lien entre les sites de nutrition communautaire et les centres de santé, ainsi que l’utilisation des soins de santé primaires par la communauté (PEV, PCIME, CPN, etc.).
- Promotion de l’utilisation des aliments fortifiés localement pour la récupération des enfants modérément malnutris ;
- Promotion du suivi et promotion de la croissance des enfants de 0-5 ans;
- Promotion de l’Alimentation du Nourrisson et du Jeune Enfant (ANJE) ;
- Promotion de l’allaitement Maternel par la redynamisation des groupes de soutien
- Mise en place des Communautés Amis de la nutrition des bébés en vu de décerner un label;
- Promotion des bonnes pratiques nutritionnelles ;
- Promotion de l’exercice physique ;
- Promotion de régimes et pratiques alimentaires adéquats et des modes de vie sains contre les excès alimentaires.
B. N°2 : lutte contre les carences en micronutriments (vit A, fer, fluor, zinc …)
- Promotion de l’allaitement Maternel ;
- Institutionnalisation de la supplémentation en vitamine A chez les enfants à partir du 6ème mois jusqu’à 59 mois tous les 6 mois en routine ou en campagne et des femmes dans le post partum immédiat ;
- Supplémentation en fer/ acide folique chez la femme enceinte et allaitante;
- Supplémentation en zinc dans le traitement de la diarrhée ;
- Supplémentation en Fluor dès 6 mois;
- Fluoration de l’eau de consommation publique en vue de la prévention des caries dentaires ;
- Promotion de la consommation des aliments locaux riches ou enrichis en micronutriments
- Promotion de la fortification alimentaire en micronutriments (fer/acide folique, vitamines du groupe B, vitamine A…) :
- Mise en place d’une politique pour faciliter l’accès de la population aux denrées alimentaires fortifiées en micronutriments ;
- Promotion de la consommation du sel iodé comme stratégie pour éliminer les TDCI
- Renforcement des activités des structures de contrôle du sel iodé et autres aliments fortifiés notamment les sites sentinelles ;
- Déparasitage : développement des approches intégrées de lutte contre l’anémie (supplémentation en FAF, déparasitage et distribution de moustiquaire) chez les femmes enceintes et les enfants d’âge préscolaire (1-5ans) et scolaire dans les formations sanitaires, dans les écoles et au niveau communautaire ;
- Dépistage et prise en charge des cas.
C. N°3 : Amélioration de la sécurité alimentaire des ménages
- Promotion de la diversification de la petite production familiale (jardin potager/fruitier, pisciculture, petit élevage ;
- Diversification et amélioration de l’utilisation des aliments au niveau des ménages.
D. N°4 : Promotion de la sécurité sanitaire des aliments
- Renforcement de l’application de la législation sur le sel iodé ;
- Mise en place du code réglementant la commercialisation des substituts du lait maternel ;
- Mise en place du code réglementant la commercialisation des produits alimentaires et des boissons non alcoolisées auprès des enfants ;
- Promotion des normes et standards des aliments ainsi que des mesures d’hygiène de l’eau et des aliments;
- Renforcement du code du travail en vue de protéger la santé et la nutrition du nourrisson et du jeune enfant, ainsi que la nutrition et la santé des mères et des travailleurs en général (congés de maternité payés, prolongation de congés de maternité, création d’espace d’allaitement maternel dans les lieux de travail et lieux publics (des crèches « amis des bébés »….) ;
- Elaboration et promulgation des réglementations/normes nationales sur la fortification des aliments locaux ou importées.
E. N°5 -Amélioration de la sécurité alimentaire et nutritionnelle des PIAVIH et autres malades chroniques
- Evaluation de l’ampleur des maladies chroniques non transmissibles liée à l’alimentation (diabète, goutte, maladies cardiovasculaires (MCV), Surpoids/obésité et cancer) ;
- Prévention et gestion des carences nutritionnelles et des maladies de surcharge
- Promotion des bonnes pratiques nutritionnelles ;
- Promotion de l’activité physique ;
- Promotion des styles de vie sains ;
- Intégration de la nutrition dans la stratégie de lutte contre le VIH/SIDA – concernant l’allaitement maternel et substituts au lait maternel, l’alimentation de complément du jeune enfant, l’alimentation des personnes vivant avec le virus de sida tant au niveau sanitaire qu’au niveau des sites de nutrition communautaire ;
- Promotion du suivi du statut nutritionnel ;
- Prise en charge des cas de malnutrition ;
- Elaboration, adoption ainsi que la diffusion d’une stratégie nationale sur l’alimentation du nourrisson et du jeune enfant dans le contexte du VIH/Sida ;
- Intégration de l’alimentation du jeune enfant dans les guides et protocoles nationaux pour le conseil et le dépistage volontaire, la prévention de la transmission du VIH de la mère à l’enfant, ainsi que la prise en charge pédiatrique du VIH/SIDA.
F. N°6 : Intégration de la nutrition en milieu scolaire et universitaire
- Supplémentation en micronutriments ;
- Promotion d’une collation fortifiée ;
- Déparasitage;
- Promotion des jardins potagers ;
- Promotion des services de restauration dont les cantines scolaires ;
- Promotion de l’éducation nutritionnelle (promotion de la nutrition et de l’hygiène) ;
- Promotion des « écoles amies de la nutrition ».
G. N° 7 : Intégration de la nutrition en milieu carcéral
- Supplémentation en micronutriments ;
- Déparasitage ;
- Promotion du suivi du statut nutritionnel ;
- Promotion des jardins potagers ;
- Promotion des bonnes pratiques nutritionnelles (promotion de la nutrition et de
- l’hygiène alimentaire) ;
- Prise en charge des cas de malnutrition.
H. N°8 : Développement du soutien nutritionnel des personnes du troisième âge
- Mise en place d'un système d'identification des personnes âgées (65ans et plus) ;
- Définition d'une politique de suivi et de prise en charge nutritionnelle;
- Promotion de la consommation des fruits, des légumes et autres aliments riches en micronutriments ;
- Promotion de l’exercice physique.
I. N°9 : Communication pour le changement de comportement durable
Intensification du plaidoyer à tous les niveaux pour :
- Promotion du droit à une alimentation et à une nutrition adéquate (quantité et qualité) ;
- Promotion de la notion de nutrition et de sécurité alimentaire des ménages auprès des décideurs ;
- Intégration de la lutte contre la malnutrition dans tous les programmes de développement ;
- Intégration des indicateurs de nutrition parmi les indicateurs de développement et de pauvreté.
Sensibilisation
- Promotion du changement de comportement durable de la population en matière de nutrition et santé (IEC, éducation nutritionnelle, …) à tous les niveaux ;
- Promotion des Actions Essentielles en Nutrition (AEN) ;
- Développement d’un système de communication qui prend en compte la promotion des bonnes pratiques nutritionnelles et la lutte contre les tabous et autres interdits alimentaires.
Mobilisation sociale
- Mobilisation de la communauté pour les activités de santé /nutrition (supplémentation en micronutriments, suivi promotion de la croissance, dépistage communautaire de la malnutrition….).
J. N°10 : Promotion de la recherche en matière de nutrition
- - Recherche opérationnelle
- - Recherche fondamentale
- - Recherche appliquée
K. N°11 : Développement des compétences en matière de nutrition
- Développement des connaissances des prestataires de services en matière de nutrition
- Amélioration des conditions des prestataires à la pratique des activités de la malnutrition (locaux, matériels, intrants, médicaments, personnel qualifié) ;
- Intégration des Actions Essentielles en Nutrition (AEN) notamment la prise en charge de la malnutrition, l’alimentation du nourrisson et du jeune enfant… dans le curriculum des écoles de formation médicale et paramédicale ;
- Renforcement des capacités des établissements sanitaires dans la prise en charge nutritionnelle selon les protocoles mis en place.
L. N°12 : Préparation à l’urgence et réponses nutritionnelles aux situations d’urgences
- Promotion de l’allaitement maternel ;
- Soutien alimentaire (surtout dans les zones affectés par des pénuries alimentaires) et supplémentation en micronutriments en priorisant les enfants, les femmes enceintes et allaitantes ;
- Renforcement des capacités des structures de prise en charge des cas de malnutrition ;
- Intensification et extension des activités de nutrition communautaire dans les zones exposées aux catastrophes naturelles avant une catastrophe pour assurer une bonne préparation à l’urgence et aussi après la catastrophe pour assurer une réhabilitation plus rapide des communautés affectées ;
- Intégration d’une dimension nutritionnelle dans les activités de réhabilitation, (ex. vivre contre travail (VCT), activi
","","","","Breastfeeding|Baby-friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI)|Breastfeeding - Continued|Breastfeeding - Exclusive 6 months|Counselling on infant feeding in the context HIV|International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes|Maternity protection|Stunting in children 0-5 yrs|Wasting in children 0-5 years|Underweight in children 0-5 years|Anaemia|Anaemia in pregnant women|Iodine deficiency disorders|Vitamin A deficiency|Complementary feeding|Overweight and obesity in school age children and adolescents|Overweight and obesity in adults|Overweight in adolescents|Overweight in school children|Raised blood glucose/diabetes|Raised blood pressure|Fruit and vegetable intake|Growth monitoring and promotion|Breastfeeding promotion/counselling|Promotion of exclusive breastfeeding for 6 months|Health professional training on breastfeeding|Infant feeding in emergencies|Complementary feeding promotion/counselling|Regulation on marketing of complementary foods|Nutrition in the school curriculum|Monitoring of children’s growth in school|School gardens|Promotion of healthy diet and prevention of obesity and diet-related NCDs (general)|Promotion of fruit and vegetable intake|Regulating marketing of unhealthy foods and beverages to children|Media campaigns on healthy diets and nutrition|Nutrition counselling on healthy diets|Physical activity and healthy lifestyle|Vitamin A|Vitamin B12|Other B-vitamins|Iodine|Iron and folic acid|Zinc|Fluoride|Micronutrient supplementation|Micronutrient powder for home fortification|Food fortification|Wheat flours|Food grade salt|Edible oils and margarine|Complementary foods|Management of moderate acute malnutrition|Management of severe acute malnutrition|Deworming|HIV/AIDS and nutrition|Nutrition & infectious disease|Food safety|Food security and agriculture|Household food security|Home, school or community gardens|Diarrhoea or ORS|Nutrition and malaria|Vaccination|Water and sanitation|Conditional cash transfer programmes|Vulnerable groups","","http://www.fao.org/faolex/results/details/en/c/LEX-FAOC146623","","","https://extranet.who.int/nutrition/gina/sites/default/filesstore/CIV%202010%20Politique%20Nationale%20de%20Nutrition.pdf"
"23500","CMR","Cameroon","","Plan National de Développement Sanitaire ","Health sector policy, strategy or plan with nutrition components","","French","","2011","","2015","Ministère de la Santé Publique","","2011","Adopted","","","Le ministre de la santé publique","Food and agriculture|Health|Trade","","United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)|World Food Programme (WFP)|World Health Organization (WHO)","","Helen Keller International (HKI)|Plan International","","","","","","","","","","","","","","Cibles de couverture du niveau communautaire
Principales Interventions à haut impact, Couverture de base de qualité, Phase I 2011-2013, Phase II 2014-2015
1.5 Allaitement maternel exclusif (0-6 mois), 21%, 52%, 65%
1.6 Prise en charge thérapeutique de la malnutrition (< de 5 ans), 32%, 52%, 65%
2.6 Prévention et traitement de l'anémie ferriprive pendant la grossesse, 61%, 65%, 80%
2.8 Supplémentation en multi micronutriments pendant la grossesse, 0%, 65%, 80%
2.9 PTME (test, conseil, AZT et conseil sur l'alimentation du jeune enfant), 20%, 65%, 80%
2.19 Supplémentation en Vitamine A, 58%, 80%, 90%
3.2.4 Prise en charge de la diarrhée par le zinc, 1%, 65%, 70%
","Santé de la mère
- Supplémentation en micro nutriments (Fer, acide folique, calcium…)
- Supplémentation en micronutriments
- C Post natale :
- Examen de la mère et du nouveau né
- Le counseling en PF et l’allaitement
- Supplémentation en micronutriments (Vit A, fer, acide folique, …)
Santé de l’enfant
- PEC de la malnutrition - PEC communautaire de la malnutrition aigüe - Voir PCIME
- Fortification alimentaire en micronutriments - Voir PCIME Clinique
- Surveillance communautaire de la croissance de l’enfant - Voir PCIME communautaire
- Démonstrations diététiques en stratégies fixes et avancées - Voir PCIME clinique et communautaire
- Déparasitage des enfants - Voir PCIME clinique
Prévention primaire de la malnutrition et des maladies non transmissibles
- Alimentation et nutrition du jeune enfant
- Promotion de l’allaitement maternel et alimentation de complément
- Sensibilisation des femmes et des communautés à la pratique de l’allaitement maternel optimal
- Promotion des Actions Essentielles en Nutrition et des pratiques d’hygiène chez le jeune enfant
- Promotion de la surveillance de la croissance de l’enfant à base communautaire
- Promotion de la supplémentation en micro nutriments
- Contrôle et suivi de l’enrichissement des aliments
- Nutrition de la femme enceinte/mère allaitante
- Supplémentation en micronutriments (fer acide folique, calcium des femmes enceintes ou allaitantes, vitamine A postpartum)
- Contrôle de la supplémentation en micronutriments des femmes enceintes ou allaitantes
- Alimentation adéquate de la femme en âge de procréer pendant la grossesse et l’allaitement
- Promotion de l’alimentation de la femme allaitante et enceinte
- Prise en charge nutritionnelle des femmes enceintes/mères allaitantes VIH positives
- Promotion d’une alimentation saine et équilibrée aux femmes enceintes/allaitantes séropositives
- Prévention primaire des maladies non transmissibles à travers la nutrition et les Activités Physiques et Sportives
- Promotion de la consommation des fruits et légumes
- Promotion de la consommation des aliments adaptés et contrôlé
- Fortification alimentaire
- Suivi de la fortification des aliments
- Prévention de la sédentarité et de l’obésité
- Promotion des activités physiques et sportives
","","","","Breastfeeding - Continued|Breastfeeding - Exclusive 6 months|Counselling on infant feeding in the context HIV|Wasting in children 0-5 years|Underweight in children 0-5 years|Underweight in women|Complementary feeding|Overweight and obesity in school age children and adolescents|Overweight and obesity in adults|Growth monitoring and promotion|Promotion of fruit and vegetable intake|Physical activity and healthy lifestyle|Vitamin A|Folic acid|Calcium|Iron|Zinc|Food fortification|Deworming|Food safety|Diarrhoea or ORS|Family planning (including birth spacing)|Improved hygiene / handwashing|Nutrition and malaria|Vaccination|Water and sanitation","","http://www.nationalplanningcycles.org/sites/default/files/planning_cycle_repository/cameroon/pnds_2011-2015_14_juillet_2011_vf.pdf","","","https://extranet.who.int/nutrition/gina/sites/default/filesstore/2011%20CMR%20PNDS.pdf"
"11530","MOZ","Mozambique","","Plano de Acção Multissectorial de Redução da Desnutrição [Multisectoral plan for chronic malnutrition reduction 2011 – 2014 (2020)]","Comprehensive national nutrition policy, strategy or plan","","English","","2011","","2014","MAPUTO","","2010","","","","","Cabinet/Presidency|Health|Food and agriculture|Education and research|Women, children, families|Finance, budget and planning|Development|Sport|Urban planning|Industry","","Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO)|United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)|United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA)|World Food Programme (WFP)|World Health Organization (WHO)","","Helen Keller International (HKI)","International NGOs: Helen Keller International (HKI) -","Other|US Agency for International Development (USAID)","Bilateral and donor agencies and lenders: US Agency for International Development (USAID),","","","","","","","","","","","GENERAL OBJECTIVE:
To accelerate the reduction of chronic undernutrition in children under 5 years of age from 44% in 2008 to 30% in 2015 and 20% in 2020, contributing to the reduction of infant morbidity-mortality and ensuring the development of a healthy and active society.
GOALS FOR EACH TARGET GROUP:
Adolescents
• Reduce anaemia rates in adolescents in and out of school from (estimated) 40% in 2010 to 20% in 2015 and 10% in 2020.
Pregnant and nursing women
• Reduce rates of anaemia during pregnancy from 53% in 2002 to 30% in 2015 and 15% in 2020.
• 30% increase in the number of women who gain 5kg during pregnancy in 2015 and 2020 (baseline to be assessed).
• Reduce iodine deficiency in pregnant women from 68% in 2004 to 35% in 2015 and 15% in 2020.
• Increase coverage rates of preventive postpartum administration of vitamin A from 60% in 2010 to 70% in 2015 and 90% in 2020.
Women of Reproductive Age
• Reduce rates of anaemia in women of reproductive age from 56% in 2010 to 30% in 2015 and 15% in 2020.
Children under 5 years of age, with emphasis on children under 2 years of age:
• Reduce Low Birth Weight from 15% in 2008 (MICS) to 10% in 2015 and 5% in 2020.
• Reduce the prevalence of chronic undernutrition in children under two years from 37.4% in 2008 (MICS) to 27% in 2015 and 17% in 2020.
• Increase the rates of exclusive breastfeeding in infants under six months from 37% in 2008 (MICS) to 60% in 2015 and 70% in 2020.
• Increase the rate of children aged 9-11 months who received at least three meals of complementary food during the day, from 37% in 2008 (MICS) to 52% in 2015 and 67% in 2010.
• Reduce the prevalence of anaemia in children from 74% in 2002 to 30% in 2015 and 15% in 2020.
Strategic Objectives:
1: To strengthen activities with impact on the nutritional status of adolescents.
2: To strengthen interventions with impact on the health and nutrition of women of reproductive age before and during pregnancy and lactation.
3: To strengthen nutrition activities for children in the first two years.
4: To strengthen household-oriented activities to improve access and utilization of foods with a high nutritional value.
5: To strengthen the Human Resources capacity in the area of nutrition.
6: To strengthen the national capacity for advocacy, coordination, management and progressive implementation of the Multisectoral Action Plan for the Reduction of Chronic Undernutrition.
7: To strengthen the food and nutrition surveillance system.
","Interventions/Activities included in the Activity Plan of the PDF
","M & E Indicators included in the Activity Plan of the PDF (Section 5.2)
","","","International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes|Low birth weight|Stunting in children 0-5 yrs|Wasting in children 0-5 years|Underweight in women|Anaemia in adolescent girls|Anaemia in pregnant women|Anaemia in women 15-49 yrs|Iodine deficiency disorders|Vitamin A deficiency|Counselling on healthy diets and nutrition during pregnancy|Breastfeeding promotion/counselling|School-based health and nutrition programmes|Provision of school meals / School feeding programme|Nutrition counselling on healthy diets|Micronutrient supplementation|Food distribution/supplementation for prevention of acute malnutrition|Food security and agriculture|Conditional cash transfer programmes","","http://www.who.int/nutrition/landscape_analysis/MozambiqueNationalstrategyreductionstunting.pdf","","WHO 2nd Global Nutrition Policy Review 2016-2017","https://extranet.who.int/nutrition/gina/sites/default/filesstore/MZB%202010%20Multisectoral%20plan%20for%20chronic%20malnutrition%20reduction.pdf|https://extranet.who.int/nutrition/gina/sites/default/filesstore/MZB%202010%20Multisectoral%20plan%20for%20chronic%20malnutrition%20reduction.pdf"
"11533","SLE","Sierra Leone","","Sierra Leone National Food and Nutrition Security Policy 2012 - 2016","Comprehensive national nutrition policy, strategy or plan","","English","","2012","","2016","Ministry of Health and Sanitation","","2012","Adopted","","","SUN","Health|Food and agriculture|Education and research|Social welfare|Finance, budget and planning|Sport|Trade","Ministry of Health and Sanitation, MAFFS, MEST, MOFED, MFMR and MOTI","Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO)|United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)|World Food Programme (WFP)|World Health Organization (WHO)","SUN","Helen Keller International (HKI)","NGOs and Faith Based Organisations, NFFA","","","","","","","Research/academia","schools, research and training institutions, SLARI and Njala University","Private sector","food production parties","Other","Nutrition Technical Committee; Small scale farmers, relevant organizations that could provide storage, facilities, resources; banks, microfinance institutions, mass media","Goal:
The overall goal of the National Food and Nutrition Policy is to contribute to the improved health, social and economic well-being of all the people in Sierra Leone, especially women, children and other nutritionally vulnerable groups.
General Objective:
To improve the current nutritional status of the population, especially infants and young children, pregnant and lactating women and other vulnerable groups in Sierra Leone
Specific Objectives (SO):
I. To undertake advocacy for policy makers, policy advisors and programme designers at national and district levels on nutrition and its relationship to development.
II. To actively promote and facilitate adequate household food security (quantity, quality and safety) to satisfy the daily dietary needs of the population.
III. To promote adoption of appropriate feeding practices by households.
IV. To strengthen preventive measures against nutrition related diseases
V. To provide curative services to individuals who are either malnourished or present a condition requiring diet therapy.
VI. To institute a nutritional surveillance system for monitoring the food and nutrition situation in the country.
VII. To promote operational research and periodic surveys into food and nutrition issues
VIII. To coordinate activities of relevant agencies involved in food and nutrition issues
","SO 1 Strategies:
- Communicate nutrition policy at national and district levels
- Develop mechanism to involve other sectors in formulation of food and nutrition activities at national and district levels
- Develop a continuous programme for dissemination of information to key decision makers at national and district levels
- Explore avenues within programmes of relevant sectors to integrate nutrition using the “Nutrition Lens” (NL) approach7
SO 2 Strategies:
- Ensure availability of adequate and appropriate technologies together with improved agricultural inputs at the appropriate time especially for the poorer groups
- Expand Operation Feed the Nation programme9 to cover all vulnerable districts
- Integrate nutrition activities into the Farmer Field School programme, which is designed for decentralized community-based market organizations10 or Agricultural Business Centres.
- Establish partnership with consumer protection organisations
- Strengthen and implement community based agriculture extension services
- Collaborate with private sector to improve food storage, processing with value addition, marketing and distribution systems for local markets
- Document, promote and improve indigenous food processing techniques and their use at the household level
- Train communities on different food processing, preservation and packaging techniques
- Promote food diversification in communities and at all levels
- Identify and implement income generating ventures which are sustainable for rural women
- Encourage and provide support for dry-season gardening for vulnerable households to ensure access to food supplies all year round.
- Strengthen and implement national food standards and laws including code and guidelines on food safety and hygiene for locally produced and imported foods
SO 3 Strategies:
- Develop, adopt and implement Code on Marketing of Breast Milk Substitutes
- Promote and strengthen the implementation of Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI) and Baby Friendly Community Initiative (BFCI)
- Support the promotion of exclusive breast feeding for HIV - exposed infants aged 0 – 6 months and continuous breast feeding until 12 months while complementary food is added at 6 months and mother continues to take triple ARV or lifelong ART.
- Promote complete weaning from breast milk at 12 months for HIV- exposed infants while mothers who do not yet require ART for their own health should stop triple ARV one week after the cessation of all breast feeding.
- Promote appropriate complementary feeding for children from six months to two years, and optimum feeding practices for children 2-5 years
- Develop nutrition messages aimed at decision makers in households (fathers, grandmothers)
- Integrate feeding counseling for pregnant and lactating women into antenatal, post natal and outreach services.
- Support adequate dietary and nutritional intake as part of successful treatment programme for persons with TB and/or HIV through provision of nutritional counseling and linking individuals to services
SO 4 Strategies:
- Ensure mass distribution/routine of vitamin A capsule to children 6-59 months of age and postpartum women
- Ensure routine de-worming of children 12-59 months and pregnant women in the second trimester
- Intensify the delivery of the integrated ante-natal, post natal and family packages using available structures at community level.
- Promote the production and consumption of locally available micronutrient-rich foods.
- Fortify widely consumed foods such as wheat flour and locally produced complementary foods with iron, B vitamins, vitamin A and other appropriate minerals
- Collaborate with relevant programme managers to strengthen and implement packages (ante-natal, post natal and family)
- Ensure that all salt for human and animal consumption is fortified with adequate levels of iodine
- Strengthen other public health measures to protect the vulnerable groups, such as increased access to potable water and sanitation facilities
- Ensure that all health and other relevant personnel are trained on the appropriate application of guidelines for the nutritional management of people living with HIV/AIDS (PLHIV) and tuberculosis (TB) patients.
- Use Essential Nutrition Actions (ENA) to consolidate the technical content of the various nutrition messages to serve as the basis for education and information sharing
- Promote and implement community based Growth Monitoring and Promotion (GMP)
- Use all available channels of communication1 for public education on food and nutrition
SO 5 Strategies:
- Ensure effective therapeutic and supplementary feeding for sick and malnourished children based on local foods
- Establish functional nutrition units comprising nutrition and catering staff and headed by a nutritionist/dietician in all hospitals
- Revise national protocol on CMAM Conduct training and capacity building activities for health workers and health volunteers to equip them to implement the CMAM approach and protocols as well as supplementary feeding.
- Use all available channels of communication for sensitizing communities on availability of services for malnourished children
- Scale up the Community-Based Integrated Management of Child Illness (CBIMCI) initiative in all districts of the country
- Create awareness and mobilize communities to utilize available nutrition services within the PHUs
- Conduct training and capacity building activities for health workers and health volunteers on nutritional assessment, education and counseling with specific focus on PLWHA and TB clients including infant feeding.
- Scale up nutritional rehabilitation of malnourished PLWHA and TB clients (incl. support for affected households where necessary), as well as livelihood activities to enable continuum of care
SO 6 strategies:
- Develop early warning system incorporating food security and nutrition status indicators
- Adapt child growth chart using the new 2006 WHO standards
- Promote and implement Community based Growth Monitoring and Promotion (CBGMP)
SO 7 strategies:
- Collaborate closely with researchers to identify and carry out action oriented research on food and nutrition issues.
- Ensure that appropriate nutrition issues are incorporated into national surveys
- Collaborate closely with researchers in conducting nutrition surveys
SO 8 Strategies:
- Develop and implement appropriate structures to implement and coordinate nutrition activities
- Strengthen linkages among key stakeholders to enhance effective implementation of nutritional activities including food security
","","","","Baby-friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI)|International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes|Maternity protection|Low birth weight|Stunting in children 0-5 yrs|Wasting in children 0-5 years|Underweight in children 0-5 years|Underweight in women|Underweight in adolescent girls|Anaemia in adolescent girls|Anaemia in pregnant women|Anaemia in women 15-49 yrs|Iodine deficiency disorders|Vitamin A deficiency|Minimum acceptable diet|Fruit and vegetable intake|Fruits|Vegetables|Minimum dietary diversity of women|Counselling on healthy diets and nutrition during pregnancy|Growth monitoring and promotion|Breastfeeding promotion/counselling|Counselling on feeding and care of LBW infants|Infant feeding in emergencies|Monitoring of the Code|Capacity building for the Code|Complementary feeding promotion/counselling|School-based health and nutrition programmes|Regulation/guidelines on types of foods and beverages available|Nutrition in the school curriculum|Hygienic cooking facilities and clean eating environment|Provision of school meals / School feeding programme|Home grown school feeding|Monitoring of children’s growth in school|School gardens|Dietary guidelines|Food-based dietary guidelines (FBDG)|Creation of healthy food environment|Healthy food environment in workplaces|Healthy food environment in hospitals|Media campaigns on healthy diets and nutrition|Nutrition counselling on healthy diets|Vitamin A|Vitamin B12|Micronutrient supplementation|Nutrition education|Wheat flours|Rice|Staple foods|Complementary foods|Biofortifcation|Food distribution/supplementation for prevention of acute malnutrition|Management of moderate acute malnutrition|Management of severe acute malnutrition|Nutritional care & support for people with TB|HIV/AIDS and nutrition|Food security and agriculture|Conditional cash transfer programmes","","","The Food and Nutrition Security Implementation Plan has been aligned with the WHA Global Nutrition Targets as follows: 1) Stunting (baseline: 34%, 2017 target: 28.5%); 2) Anaemia in women of reproductive age (baseline: 45%, 2017 target: 36%), anaemia in children (baseline: 76%, 2017 target: 51%); 3) Low birth weight; 4) Child overweight (baseline: 8%, 2017 target: 5.6%); 5) Exclusive breastfeeding (baseline: 32%, 2017 target: 60%); and, 6) Wasting (baseline: 6.9%, 2017 target: 4.8%).","WHO 2nd Global Nutrition Policy Review 2016-2017","https://extranet.who.int/nutrition/gina/sites/default/filesstore/SLE%202012%20Sierra%20Leone%20Nutrition%20Policy%20pdf%20version.pdf"
"23523","GIN","Guinea","","Plan Stratégique Multisectoriel d'Alimentation et de Nutrition","Comprehensive national nutrition policy, strategy or plan","","French","5","2014","","2016","Ministère de la Santé et de l'Hygiène Publique","5","2014","Adopted","5","2014","","Cabinet/Presidency|Nutrition council|Health|Food and agriculture|Education and research|Social welfare|Finance, budget and planning|Development|Environment|Industry|Information|Sub-national","Comité national de suivi de la CINAlliance guinéenne pour la fortification des aliments Conseil national de sécurité alimentaire Agence nationale de développement agricole et de sécurité alimentaire, Division alimentation et nutrition)","United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)|World Food Programme (WFP)|World Health Organization (WHO)","","Action Against Hunger (AAH) / Action contre la faim (ACF)|Helen Keller International (HKI)|Terre des Hommes","","Other|Japan International Co-operation Agency (JICA)|The World Bank","","European Union","","","","","","Private sector","","","","3.2 Objectifs du plan stratégique national de nutrition et alimentation
Le but de ce plan est de faire reculer la sous-alimentation et la malnutrition ainsi que leurs conséquences socio-sanitaires.
Les objectifs spécifiques d’ici à fin 2016 sont de:
- Améliorer le leadership et la gouvernance contre la sous-alimentation et la malnutrition
- Réduire de moitié l’insécurité alimentaire
- Atteindre la couverture géographique universelle des interventions essentielles de prévention de la malnutrition maternelle et infanto-juvénile, du surpoids et de l’obésité.
- Atteindre la couverture géographique universelle de la prise en charge holistique des cas de malnutrition
","3.4.2 Approche stratégique 2 : La sécurité nutritionnelle des groupes vulnérables
7. Promotion de l’alimentation de la mère et de l’enfant
- Mise en place d’un système de Surveillance de la croissance de l’enfant
- Promotion de l’AME
- Promotion de l’alimentation de complément
- Promotion de l’alimentation de la femme enceinte et allaitante
12. Supplémentation alimentaire aux groupes vulnérables – enfants de 24 à 59 mois, personnes âgées, malades, population carcérale, enfants dans la rue, réfugiés, soudure rigoureuse, PVVIH
- Intégration de l’évaluation de la vulnérabilité alimentaire dans le diagnostic communautaire
- Appui alimentaire
- Conseil nutritionnel
15. Supplémentation en micronutriments (Fer Acide folique, Vit A, Zinc, Calcium…) des femmes enceintes et allaitantes, femmes de 15 à 45 ans, enfants scolarisés et non scolarisés de 1 à 14 ans
3.4.3 Approche stratégique 3 : L’Accès universel à la prise en charge holistique des cas de malnutrition
3.4.4 Approche stratégique 4 : La Formation, la recherche et le développement pour la sécurité alimentaire et nutritionnelle
Further detail on activities per strategies can be found in tables P20-25
","- Proportion des femmes enceintes et allaitantes ayant reçus des conseils nutritionnels
- Proportion des CDD et CLB disposant de cantines scolaires
- Proportion de groupes de personnes vulnérables recevant une supplémentation alimentaire
- Proportion des centres de sante pratiquant la directive opérationnelle des 1000 jours
- Couverture en micronutriments des populations cibles
- Proportion de populations cibles qui consomment les aliments fortifiés
- Proportion de préfectures offrant une PEC nutritionnelle aux malades
- Niveau de connaissances en nutrition des éducateurs et intervenants sociaux
- Proportion des agents communautaires formés en nutrition
- Proportion de communes qui mettent en oeuvre les activités de nutrition
- Taux d’allaitement exclusif au sein au cours des six premiers mois de la vie
- Prévalence des enfants de moins de cinq ans présentant un retard de croissance
- Taux d’anémie chez les femmes en âge de procréer
- Proportion de l’insuffisance pondérale à la naissance
- Pourcentage d’enfants en surcharge pondérale
- Pourcentage d'enfants 6-59 mois ayant reçu une forte dose de vitamine A au cours des 6 derniers mois
- Pourcentage d'enfants 12-59 mois ayant reçu une capsule de mébendazole au cours des 6 derniers mois
- Proportion de ménages qui consomment du sel adéquatement iodé
- Pourcentage d'individus ayant un taux d'iode urinaire (iodurie) faible
","Outcome indicators|Process indicators","","Breastfeeding|Breastfeeding - Exclusive 6 months|Low birth weight|Stunting in children 0-5 yrs|Wasting in children 0-5 years|Underweight in children 0-5 years|Underweight in women|Anaemia|Anaemia in pregnant women|Anaemia in women 15-49 yrs|Iodine deficiency disorders|Vitamin A deficiency|Complementary feeding|Overweight in children 0-5 yrs|Overweight and obesity in school age children and adolescents|Overweight and obesity in adults|Raised blood glucose/diabetes|Raised blood pressure|Counselling on healthy diets and nutrition during pregnancy|Growth monitoring and promotion|Breastfeeding promotion/counselling|Promotion of exclusive breastfeeding for 6 months|Provision of school meals / School feeding programme|School gardens|Promotion of healthy diet and prevention of obesity and diet-related NCDs (general)|Vitamin A|Calcium|Iodine|Iron and folic acid|Zinc|Micronutrient supplementation|Micronutrient powder for home fortification|Food fortification|Nutrition education|Wheat flours|Maize flours|Food grade salt|Edible oils and margarine|Complementary foods|Milk|Food distribution/supplementation for prevention of acute malnutrition|Management of moderate acute malnutrition|Management of severe acute malnutrition|Deworming|Nutritional care & support for people with TB|HIV/AIDS and nutrition|Food safety|Food security and agriculture|Household food security|Improved hygiene / handwashing|Nutrition and malaria|Vaccination|Water and sanitation|Conditional cash transfer programmes|Vulnerable groups","","","","","https://extranet.who.int/nutrition/gina/sites/default/filesstore/GIN%202014%20Plan%20Multisectoriel%20Nutrition_0.pdf"
"24707","BFA","Burkina Faso","","Plan de Renforcement de la Lutte Contre les Carences en Micronutriments","Nutrition policy, strategy or plan focusing on specific nutrition areas","","French","","2015","","2020","Ministere de la Sante","","2015","","","","","Nutrition council|Health|Food and agriculture|Education and research|Social welfare|Finance, budget and planning|Industry","","United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)|World Health Organization (WHO)","","Helen Keller International (HKI)|Nutrition International|Terre des Hommes","","","","","","","","","","","","","","Objectif général
financements pour une mise en oeuvre efficiente de la lutte contre les carences en Contribuer à la réduction des carences en micronutriments au Burkina Faso d’ici 2020.
Objectifs spécifiques
- Réduire la carence en vitamine A au Burkina Faso d’ici fin 2020 :
- Réduire la prévalence de l’anémie de 30% chez les enfants de 6 à 59 mois et chez les femmes en âge procréer d’ici fin 2020 au Burkina Faso ;
- Eliminer les troubles dus aux carences en iode au Burkina Faso d’ici 2020 ;
- Renforcer les capacités des structures de contrôle, d’inspection et des unités de production d’aliments fortifiés au Burkina Faso d’ici 2020
- Renforcer les activités de communication en faveur de la lutte contre les carences en micronutriments au Burkina Faso d’ici fin 2020 ;
- Rendre disponibles à 100% les données statistiques dans le domaine de la lutte contre les carences en micronutriments au Burkina Faso d’ici fin 2020 ;
- Mobiliser au moins 95% des besoins de micronutriments au Burkina Faso d’ici fin 2020.
","Supplémentation médicamenteuse
- La supplémentation en vitamine A
- La supplémentation en fer/acide folique
La fortification à domicile
L’iodation universelle du sel
Education nutritionnelle
Renforcement du suivi et de l’évaluation des interventions
","Table Pages 44-45
","Outcome indicators","","Anaemia|Anaemia in pregnant women|Anaemia in women 15-49 yrs|Iodine deficiency disorders|Vitamin A deficiency|Nutrition in the school curriculum|Media campaigns on healthy diets and nutrition|Vitamin A|Micronutrient powder for home fortification|Food fortification|Nutrition education|Wheat flours|Maize flours|Complementary foods","","","","","https://extranet.who.int/nutrition/gina/sites/default/filesstore/BFA%202015%20Plan%20contre%20les%20carences%20en%20micronutriments.pdf"
"36034","TZA","United Republic of Tanzania","","National Multi-sectoral Nutrition Action Plan (NMNAP)","Comprehensive national nutrition policy, strategy or plan","","English","","2016","","2021","Prime Ministers Office: United Republic of Tanzania","10","2016","Adopted","10","2016","Prime Ministers Office: United Republic of Tanzania. High Level Steering Committee on Nutrition (HLSCN)","Cabinet/Presidency|Nutrition council|Health|Food and agriculture|Education and research|Social welfare|Finance, budget and planning|Development|Sport|Trade|Environment|Industry|Information|Labour|Sub-national","Prime Ministers Office: United Republic of TanzaniaTNFC","","UNICEF, WHO, UN-REACH, WFP, FAO","Helen Keller International (HKI)","PANITA, HKI, COUNSENUT","","Fhi360, Irish Aid, DFID, USAID","","","National NGOs","","","academia (SUA, MUHAS); institutions (Ifakara Health Institute), Tanzania Public Health Association - TPHA, Tanzania Diabetic Association – TDA, Tanzania NCD Alliance)","","unspecified","","","The NMNAP’s broad goal is to accelerate scaling up of high impact multisectoral nutrition specific and nutrition sensitive interventions and creating an enabling environment for improved nutrition, to contribute to the building of a healthy and wealthy nation.
NMNAP Key targets by 2020/21
- Reduction in the prevalence of stunting among children under five years from 34 percent in 2015 (TDHS 2015/16) to 28 percent in 2021 (WHA indicator target 1);
- Reduction in the prevalence of anaemia in women of reproductive age (15-49 years) from 45 percent in 2015 (TDHS 2015/16) to 33 percent in 2021 (WHA indicator target 2);
- Reduction in the prevalence of low birthweight from 7 percent in 2010 (TDHS 2010) to 5 percent in 2021 (WHA indicator target 3);
- Increase in the rate of exclusive breast feeding (0-<6 months) from 43 percent (TNNS 2014) to 50 percent(WHA indicator target 4)
- Maintain prevalence of overweight among children under five years under 5 percent (TDHS 2015/16) (WHA indicator target 5);
- Maintain prevalence of Global Acute Malnutrition (wasting) among children under five at 5 percent (TDHS 2015/16) (WHA indicator target 6);
- Reduction in the prevalence of sub-clinical vitamin A deficiency (VAD) among children aged 6-59 months from 33 percent in 2010 to 26 percent in 2021;
- Maintain median urinary iodine concentration of women of reproductive age (15-49 years) between 100-299 u μg/L by 2021;
- Reduction in the prevalence of underweight in children underfive years from 14 percent in 2015/16 to 12 percent in 2020/21;
- Reduction in the prevalence of anaemia in children aged 6-59 months from 57 percent in 2015/16 (TDHS 2015/16) to 50 percent in 2020/21
- Maintain the prevalence of diabetes among adults under 10 percent by 2021 (Global NCD target);
- Maintain the prevalence of obesity among adults under 30 percent by 2021 (Global NCD target).
","4.5 Key strategies
4.5.1 Community-centred multisectoral approach as overarching strategy
82. Acknowledging that nutrition is a crosscutting issue that requires the effective contribution of multiple actors, sectors and administrative levels, the NMNAP is based on a national multisectoral strategic nutrition framework for planning, implementation and coordination. Thus, the overarching strategy for the NMNAP is a community-centred multisectoral nutrition approach that explicitly embraces simultaneous actions for nutrition specific interventions at the level of immediate causes and nutrition sensitive interventions at the levels of underlying and basic causes of malnutrition. A multisectoral nutrition system is composed of multiple sectors (e.g. agriculture, health, WASH (water, sanitation and hygiene), education, social protection, environment); multiple levels (national, regional, Local Government Authorities and importantly the community); and multiple partners (Government, development partners – UN/multi-laterals, bilaterals, NGOs, CSOs, academia and private sector). The multisectoral community-centred strategy is based on the overwhelming scientific evidence that achieving high coverage of the evidence-based high impact nutrition interventions (Lancet Nutrition Series 2008 and 2013) requires multisectoral harmonization and collaboration with key nutrition stakeholders.
4.5.2 Supportive cross-cutting strategies
83. The overarching multisectoral approach is complemented by several supportive strategies which are relevant and applicable to each of the seven key result areas. These include: -
1) Social and Behaviour Change Communication (SBCC) for nutrition through interpersonal communication and mass media to promote adoption of appropriated behaviours and practices and commitment to achieving common results for everyone and everywhere in the country for improved nutrition. The NMNAP will use the SBCC Strategy for 2013-2018.
2) Advocacy and Social mobilization to sustain political will and Government commitment for nutrition and to mobilise adequate resources for nutrition. Social mobilisation activities are important to create awareness of the problems of malnutrition among decision makers and community members to improve nutrition. For example, a 2013 landscape analysis by TFNC found that policy makers and communities do not perceive stunting and micronutrient deficiencies as problems to be addressed. Since many of the actions in advocacy and social mobilization require behavioural, attitude and practice changes by policy makers and communities for overall societal change all types of media need to be involved. Social mobilization will also increase the participation of communities in the implementation of the NMNAP. Since the key actors for improved nutrition are households and communities ensuring their active participation of communities is a critical success factor for the NMNAP.
3) Community-Centred Capacity Development (CCCD): The development of human, institutional and organizational capacity is critical in the implementation of the NMNAP especially at the community level. Community participation in doing their own triple A processes of assessment, analysis and action can be greatly enhanced by developing the capacity of the community and that of community-based organisations to support social accountability mechanisms (see section 6.1 for definition of social accountability). Recognizing that communities constitute the greater whole of society and that they exist in relationship with society as a whole, development of capacity of communities should go hand in hand with developing capacity at the higher levels – council, district, region, national.
4) Developing functional human resource capacity: Although human resource technical capacity in nutrition is fairly adequate, functional capacity in communication skills, coordination and strategic leadership and management requires further development. System-wide development of nutrition relevant institutions, especially for TFNC as the institutional leader in the implementation of this NMNAP will be given priority. Institutionalization of the nutrition steering committees at all levels and developing their functional capacity will be further explored.
5) Aligning all stakeholders with the NMNAP through Community-Public-Private Partnerships (C-PPP) using the “three ONES principle” of ONE plan, ONE coordinating mechanism and ONE monitoring and evaluation framework, so that every stakeholder come together to tackle malnutrition and build an enabling environment for improved nutrition with equity. Capacities will be developed to conduct and manage C-PPPs as part of a collaborative leadership strategy. Forming strategic partnerships at all levels of the nutrition system will enhance coordination and accountability. Strategic collaboration, including the engagement of the private sector through implementation of appropriate principles of social and corporate responsibility, is likely to result in cost-efficiency and effectiveness and promote ownership and sustainability.
6) Delivery of quality and timely nutrition services: This NMNAP will promote the delivery of nutrition and nutrition-relevant services that are timely and of high quality. Tools will be put in place to assess the effective implementation and delivery of services, and where bottlenecks are identified, remedial and corrective measures will be adopted including legal enforcement as appropriate.
7) Mainstream equality in all the seven Key Result Areas of the NMNAP without discrimination, focusing on women, children and adolescent girls. Although generally Tanzania has made good progress in empowering women, traditional patriarchal practices remain, that favour men, including in nutrition relevant practices, and are often reflected in both formal and informal systems and institutions especially in the rural areas.
8) A resource mobilization strategy will be developed to advocate for resource allocation to the NMNAP by both Government and partners.
9) Tracking progress and operational research and development will be promoted to ensure key lessons and insights gained from the implementation of the NMNAP are learnt and used in adjusting and improving the proposed interventions at regular intervals and linking research with programmes and training. Research will also provide quality assurance, robust data on program performance and support learning. Linking research to the programmes and to training will assure evidence-based sharing of experience and intergenerational transfer of knowledge. Efforts will be made to link the implementation of the NMNAP with nutrition-relevant centres of excellence both nationally and internationally.
10) Overall planning and coordination is a key strategy to align implementation of the NMNAP to achieve far greater results than what single sectors could achieve alone.
","note: indicators are embedded in targets: see above and document, table 4, p49
","Outcome indicators","","Breastfeeding - Exclusive 6 months|International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes|Maternity protection|Low birth weight|Stunting in children 0-5 yrs|Wasting in children 0-5 years|Underweight in children 0-5 years|Anaemia in adolescent girls|Anaemia in pregnant women|Anaemia in women 15-49 yrs|Iodine deficiency disorders|Vitamin A deficiency|Minimum acceptable diet|Overweight in children 0-5 yrs|Overweight and obesity in adults|Overweight in school children|Raised blood glucose/diabetes|Counselling on healthy diets and nutrition during pregnancy|Growth monitoring and promotion|Breastfeeding promotion/counselling|Counselling on feeding and care of LBW infants|Infant feeding in emergencies|Monitoring of the Code|Capacity building for the Code|Complementary feeding promotion/counselling|Complementary food provision|Regulation on marketing of complementary foods|School-based health and nutrition programmes|Hygienic cooking facilities and clean eating environment|Creation of healthy food environment|Media campaigns on healthy diets and nutrition|Vitamin A|Iodine|Iron|Iron and folic acid|Micronutrient supplementation|Micronutrient powder for home fortification|Food fortification|Wheat flours|Staple foods|Food grade salt|Complementary foods|Food distribution/supplementation for prevention of acute malnutrition|Management of moderate acute malnutrition|Management of severe acute malnutrition|Deworming|HIV/AIDS and nutrition|Food security and agriculture|Household food security|Family planning (including birth spacing)|Nutrition and malaria|Water and sanitation|Conditional cash transfer programmes|Vulnerable groups","","http://www.tfnc.go.tz/uploads/publications/en1512587132-NMNAP%202016-21.pdf ","","WHO 2nd Global Nutrition Policy Review 2016-2017","https://extranet.who.int/nutrition/gina/sites/default/filesstore/1_TZA%202016%20NMNAP.pdf|https://extranet.who.int/nutrition/gina/sites/default/filesstore/1_TZA%202016%20NMNAP.pdf|https://extranet.who.int/nutrition/gina/sites/default/filesstore/1_TZA%202016%20NMNAP.pdf|https://extranet.who.int/nutrition/gina/sites/default/filesstore/1_TZA%202016%20NMNAP.pdf|https://extranet.who.int/nutrition/gina/sites/default/filesstore/1_TZA%202016%20NMNAP.pdf|https://extranet.who.int/nutrition/gina/sites/default/filesstore/1_TZA%202016%20NMNAP.pdf"