A perspective on the development and sustainability of nutrition surveillance in low-income countries

This paper discusses why nutrition surveillance is hard to sustain and factors in systems which have been maintained

Abstract

Many varied activities are encompassed by the term “nutrition(al) surveillance”. Several national surveillance systems were initiated soon after the World Food Conference in 1974, but few have lasted. Most were complex, expensive, slow to produce findings, and were eventually stopped.

This paper discusses why nutrition surveillance in low-income countries is so hard to sustain, and identifies the key factors in systems which have been maintained.

The study forms part of the Transform Nutrition programme of research funded by the UK Department for International Development.

Citation

Tuffrey, V. A perspective on the development and sustainability of nutrition surveillance in low-income countries BioMed Central Nutrition (2016) 2: 15. doi:10.1186/s40795-016-0054-x

A perspective on the development and sustainability of nutrition surveillance in low-income countries

Published 8 March 2016