Roger Shrimpton1, Lisanne M du Plessis2, Hélène Delisle3, Sonia Blaney4, Stephen J Atwood5, David Sanders6, Barrie Margetts7, Roger Hughes8. 1. 1Department of Global Community Health and Behavioural Sciences,Tulane School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine,1440 Canal Street,New Orleans,LA 70112,USA. 2. 2Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences,Stellenbosch University,Tygerberg,South Africa. 3. 3Département de nutrition, Faculté de Médecine,Université de Montréal,Montréal, QC,Canada. 4. 4École des sciences des aliments,de nutrition et d'études familiales, Faculté des sciences de la santé et des services communautaires,Université de Moncton,Moncton, NB,Canada. 5. 5School of Global Studies,Thammasat University,Rangsit,Pathum Thani,Thailand. 6. 6School of Public Health,University of the Western Cape,Bellville,South Africa. 7. 7Faculty of Medicine,University of Southampton,Southampton,UK. 8. 8Faculty of Health Sciences and Medicine,Bond University,Gold Coast,QLD,Australia.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe why and how capacity-building systems for scaling up nutrition programmes should be constructed in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). DESIGN: Position paper with task force recommendations based on literature review and joint experience of global nutrition programmes, public health nutrition (PHN) workforce size, organization, and pre-service and in-service training. SETTING: The review is global but the recommendations are made for LMIC scaling up multisectoral nutrition programmes. SUBJECTS: The multitude of PHN workers, be they in the health, agriculture, education, social welfare, or water and sanitation sector, as well as the community workers who ensure outreach and coverage of nutrition-specific and -sensitive interventions. RESULTS: Overnutrition and undernutrition problems affect at least half of the global population, especially those in LMIC. Programme guidance exists for undernutrition and overnutrition, and priority for scaling up multisectoral programmes for tackling undernutrition in LMIC is growing. Guidance on how to organize and scale up such programmes is scarce however, and estimates of existing PHN workforce numbers - although poor - suggest they are also inadequate. Pre-service nutrition training for a PHN workforce is mostly clinical and/or food science oriented and in-service nutrition training is largely restricted to infant and young child nutrition. CONCLUSIONS: Unless increased priority and funding is given to building capacity for scaling up nutrition programmes in LMIC, maternal and child undernutrition rates are likely to remain high and nutrition-related non-communicable diseases to escalate. A hybrid distance learning model for PHN workforce managers' in-service training is urgently needed in LMIC.
OBJECTIVE: To describe why and how capacity-building systems for scaling up nutrition programmes should be constructed in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). DESIGN: Position paper with task force recommendations based on literature review and joint experience of global nutrition programmes, public health nutrition (PHN) workforce size, organization, and pre-service and in-service training. SETTING: The review is global but the recommendations are made for LMIC scaling up multisectoral nutrition programmes. SUBJECTS: The multitude of PHN workers, be they in the health, agriculture, education, social welfare, or water and sanitation sector, as well as the community workers who ensure outreach and coverage of nutrition-specific and -sensitive interventions. RESULTS: Overnutrition and undernutrition problems affect at least half of the global population, especially those in LMIC. Programme guidance exists for undernutrition and overnutrition, and priority for scaling up multisectoral programmes for tackling undernutrition in LMIC is growing. Guidance on how to organize and scale up such programmes is scarce however, and estimates of existing PHN workforce numbers - although poor - suggest they are also inadequate. Pre-service nutrition training for a PHN workforce is mostly clinical and/or food science oriented and in-service nutrition training is largely restricted to infant and young child nutrition. CONCLUSIONS: Unless increased priority and funding is given to building capacity for scaling up nutrition programmes in LMIC, maternal and child undernutrition rates are likely to remain high and nutrition-related non-communicable diseases to escalate. A hybrid distance learning model for PHN workforce managers' in-service training is urgently needed in LMIC.
Entities:
Keywords:
Capacity building; Nutrition workforce; Scaling up nutrition
Authors: Hélène Delisle; Roger Shrimpton; Sonia Blaney; Lisanne Du Plessis; Stephen Atwood; David Sanders; Barrie Margetts Journal: Bull World Health Organ Date: 2017-04-05 Impact factor: 9.408