학술논문

Perils of scaling up: Effects of expanding a nutrition programme in Madagascar
Document Type
article
Source
Maternal and Child Nutrition. 15(Suppl 1)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Public Health
Health Sciences
Nutrition and Dietetics
Prevention
Nutrition
Pediatric
Generic health relevance
Zero Hunger
Child Nutrition Disorders
Child
Preschool
Community Health Services
Government
Health Education
Health Promotion
Humans
Infant
Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
Infant
Newborn
Madagascar
Nutritional Sciences
Nutritional Status
Program Evaluation
Surveys and Questionnaires
community-based programme
difference in differences
impact evaluation
integrated nutrition programme
scale-up
Nutrition & Dietetics
Nutrition and dietetics
Midwifery
Language
Abstract
Scaling up integrated nutrition programmes from small, targeted interventions or pilot studies to large-scale government-run programmes can be challenging, with risks of changing the nature and quality of the interventions such that effectiveness is not sustained. In 1999, the Government of Madagascar introduced a nationwide, community-based, growth-monitoring and nutrition education programme, which was gradually scaled up throughout the country until 2011. Data from three nationally representative surveys, administered pre- and post-programme implementation, in participating and non-participating communities, were used to evaluate the effectiveness of the programme to reduce malnutrition in children under 5 after two phases of expansion (1999-2004 and 2004-2011). In our analyses, we compared "original" communities, who had initiated the programme during the first phase, and "new" communities, who initiated the programme during the second phase. "Original" communities demonstrated a significant effect on mean weight-for-age and on the prevalence of underweight by 2004; this effect was sustained at a reduced level through 2011. In contrast, "new" communities showed no benefits for any childhood nutritional outcomes. An explanation for these findings may be that community health workers in the "new" communities reported lower motivation and less use of key messages and materials than those in the "original" communities. Frontline workers reported increased workload and irregular pay across the board during the second phase of programme expansion. Our findings underscore the risk of losing effectiveness if programme quality is not maintained during scale-up. Key factors, such as training and motivation of frontline workers, are important to address when bringing a programme to scale.