Stories of change in nutrition: lessons from a new generation of studies from Africa, Asia and Europe
Date
2022
Authors
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Publisher
Springer
Abstract
Abstract
How does nutrition improve? We need to understand better what drives both positive and negative change in diferent
contexts, and what more can be done to reduce malnutrition. Since 2015, the Stories of Change in Nutrition studies have
analysed and documented experiences in many diferent African and Asian countries, to foster empirically-grounded experiential learning across contexts. This article provides an overview of fndings from 14 studies undertaken in nine countries in
South Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, and Europe between 2017 and 2021. The studies used a combination of methods, including
regression-decomposition analyses of national datasets to assess determinants of nutritional change; policy process and food
environment analyses; and community-level research assessing attitudes to change. This article takes a narrative synthesis
approach to identify key themes across the studies, paying particular attention to multisectoral determinants, changes in the
food environment, the role of structural factors (including longstanding social inequities), and changes in political commitment, cross-sectoral coherence and capacity. Given the inherent multisectoral nature of nutrition, many countries are
experimenting with diferent models of ensuring coherence across sectors that are captured in this body of work. The relative immaturity of the policy sector in dealing with issues such as obesity and overweight, and associated infuences in the
wider food environment, adds a further challenge. To address these interrelated issues, policy must simultaneously tackle
nutrition’s upstream (social/economic/equity) and downstream (health and dietary) determinants. Studies synthesised here
provide empirically-driven inspiration for action.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Malnutrition, Obesity, Policy, Commitment, Coherence, Equity