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Thin on the GroundSummaryIn this report, Save the Children UK claims that World Bank efforts to curb childhood malnutrition in Bangladesh, Uganda, and Ethiopia have had no impact. Resources may be being wasted on these large-scale communitynutrition projects, the charity claims. It "found no difference in the rates of malnutrition" in Bangladesh after six years of project implementation. "Growth monitoring charts were poorly understood by mothers and supplementary feeding had limited effectiveness especially for very young children". The report claims that the projects are based on a "widely discredited" approach, which assumes "that the child is malnourished because the mother isn't doing something right". The report is also critical of what Save the Children UK sees as inadequate monitoring and/or insufficiently transparent communication of evaluation results. It urges the World Bank and donors to stop further scale-up of these projects until objective reviews are completed, as follows:
The report also urges an independent review of the evidence supporting current approaches to addressing poor child growth and explore the cost-effectiveness of alternative approaches. It also calls for increased accountability in the design, monitoring, and evaluation of the projects. Excerpts from the Executive Summary: In addition to design problems, the projects face a host of implementation constraints. First, the African projects rely on inadequately trained, under-supervised and poorly paid nutrition workers to implement a complex intervention. In addition, project costs are $5-10 per year for each person enrolled on the project, often exceeding the per capita investment in healthservices several times over. The implementation in Uganda and Bangladesh relies on parallel structures (staff, facilities, resources) that for the most part will not last beyond the life of the project, rendering it institutionally unsustainable. Therefore, before making any further investments of this kind, Save the Children UK asks that the World Bank:
Click here to access the full document (PDF). SourceBretton Woods Update 35 (July-August 2003), forwarded to The Communication Initiative on July 31 2003. Placed on the Communication Initiative site April 29 2004 Last Updated June 14 2004 |
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