In May 2014, USAID released the 2014–2025 Multi-Sectoral Nutrition Strategy, marking the first time the agency has had an overarching strategy that emphasizes the need to address both direct and underlying causes of malnutrition to have an impact on malnutrition. The strategy also provides a blueprint for alignment of the efforts of the USAID Bureau of Global Health, the U.S. Government’s Feed the Future and Global Health initiatives, the Office of Food for Peace development programs, resilience efforts, and other nutrition investments.
As part of the next phase for the new strategy, USAID is supporting its rollout and implementation through the release of a series of technical guidance briefs and a series of Multi-Sectoral Nutrition Global Learning & Evidence Exchanges (MSN-GLEEs). The MSN-GLEE, which was a closed event, was held in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania from March 8–10, 2016, and included USAID mission staff and other U.S. Government staff, host country government partners, implementing partners and other experts working in this area.
Meeting Report
Presentations
The contents of the presentations are the responsibility of the individual authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of USAID or the United States Government.
Day 1
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Overview of Meeting Goals and Objectives
Sandy Remancus, FANTA -
The State of the Region and Multi-Sectoral Nutrition Programming
Boitshepo "Bibi" Giyose, FAO -
Multi-Sectoral Nutrition Strategy 2014-2025
Anne Peniston, USAID/GH -
Nutrition-Specific Actions: What Works and Why
Deborah Ash, FANTA -
Nutrition-Sensitive Agriculture: What Works and Why
Katherine Dennison, USAID/BFS - Aflatoxin Impacts on Child Growth
Ahmed Kablan, USAID/BFS -
Nutrition for Adolescent Girls and Women
Kavita Sethuraman, FANTA - Dietary Diversity and Social Behavior Change
Katherine Dennison, USAID/BFS
Day 2
- Rwanda: Examples of Coordination and Monitoring Across Technical Sectors
Silver Karumba, USAID/Rwanda -
Ethiopia: Multi-sectoral National Nutrition Program-Lessons Learned 2013-2015
Mary Harvey, USAID/Ethiopia -
Kenya: Nutrition and Health Program Plus
Brian Njoroge, NHP+ Kenya -
Lessons learned from Alive & Thrive SBC programs
Desta Kebede, A&T/Ethiopia -
Giving participants a voice in program design: Trials of Improved Practices (TIPS) in the FFP Amalima Project in Zimbabwe
Melissa Antal, Manoff Group -
Improving Infant and Young Child Feeding: Lessons from Market-based and Hybrid Delivery Models
Marti van Liere, GAIN -
Climate Change, Food Security and Nutrition
Katherine Dennison, USAID/BFS -
Severe Weather and Other Shocks – Are we Doing Enough to Mitigate Risks for Nutrition?
Mike Manske, USAID Office of Food for Peace -
Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH) Interventions for Improved Nutrition
Kyla Gregoire, USAID/FFP -
NACS – A systems approach to integrating nutrition assessment, counseling and support within health services through quality improvement
Tim Quick, USAID/OHA - M&E for MSN Programming
Raphael Makonnen, USAID/GH; Anne Swindale, USAID/BFS; Elizabeth Bontrager, USAID/GH
Day 3
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Tanzania: Coordinating Multi-sectoral Stakeholders to Address Nutrition
Obey Assery, PMO/Tanzania -
Malawi: Integration of Nutrition Curriculum into Universities, Lessons Learned
Violet Orchardson, USAID/Malawi -
Uganda: Integration of Multi-sectoral Nutrition Interventions into the Development Planning Process at the District Level
Brenda Namugumya, FANTA/Uganda -
A Nutrition Governance Framework: Why it Matters for Scale Up and Sustainability
Deborah Ash, FANTA/Tanzania -
Conflict of Interest Among Stakeholders in Nutrition
Katherine Hagen, GSO -
Private Sector Solutions – an Example from VALID Nutrition
Andrew Chinguwo, VALID