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Social protection: A pathway for sectorial integration of nutrition

  1. 1. Social protection: a pathway for sectorial integration of nutrition Nita Dalmiya Nutrition Specialist UNICEF 32nd RPCA Annual Meeting 12-14 December, 2016
  2. 2. Outline • Regional situation of malnutrition • What is social protection? How can social protection programmes improve nutrition outcomes? • Challenges and lessons learned in making social protection nutrition-sensitive • Conclusions and next steps
  3. 3. Deteriorating regional situation: increase in number of stunted children 3 Number of children under 5 who are stunted, by region, 1990 to 2014 Source: UNICEF/WHO/World Bank Joint Child Malnutrition Estimates, September 2015 edition *Central Eastern Europe/Commonwealth of Independent States. Due to consecutive lack of any data, results are not displayed for year 1990 (1995 is presented instead); the CEE/CIS region does not include Russia due to missing data; Consecutive low population coverage for the 2014 estimate (interpret with caution).
  4. 4. Persisting inequalities in stunting Note: Analysis based on a subset of 87 countries with available data by wealth quintile groupings; regional estimates represent data from countries covering at least half of the regional population. Data are from 2008 to 2014, except for Brazil (2006), and India (2005-06). *Excludes China. Source: UNICEF Global Database, 2015 Stunting prevalence is consistently higher among poorer wealth quintiles Percentage of under-fives who are moderately or severely stunted, by wealth quintile and by region, 2014
  5. 5. More than half of all countries in region with underweight women 5 5 5 6 8 8 9 9 9 11 11 11 11 12 13 13 14 15 16 19 23 0 5 10 15 20 25 Percent Poor situation Serious situation Percentage of women with BMI<18,5 in WCAR Source : Global Nutrition Report, 2014
  6. 6. Cumulative, overlapping vulnerabilities negatively influence malnutrition progress 6 Cumulative and overlapping vulnerabilities Climate change Food insecurity Rapid population growth and urbanization Politial instability and insecurity
  7. 7. Regional nutrition crisis. Multi-factorial causality 7 Frequency of violent civil conflict events and people affected by climate, Africa (2000-2014)
  8. 8. WHAT IS SOCIAL PROTECTION? HOW CAN SOCIAL PROTECTION PROGRAMMES IMPROVE NUTRITION? 8
  9. 9. What is social protection? • Policies and programmes aimed at preventing, reducing and eliminating economic and social vulnerabilities and poverty in order to ensure a minimum standard of dignity and well–being throughout the life–cycle to all individuals , with a particular emphasis towards most disadvantaged groups. Social Protection Inter Agency Board 9
  10. 10. Social protection well positioned to improve nutrition outcomes Source: Nutrition and social protection » FAO 2015 Pillars of a universal Social Protection System Social Transfers: Food Cash/vouchers Cash for work Programmes to ensure: access to services School feeding Health insurance Social support and care: Empowerment Legislation and regulation: Price subsidies (to increase consumption)
  11. 11. Strong evidence base linking social transfers with improved access to nutrition, health and care 11 Improved diet quantity, quality, and diversity Decreased vulnerability to shifting patterns of agriculture and climate Decreased childhood mortality Helping children reach their full potential Strengthened women’s empowerment and household investments
  12. 12. Global and regional commitments recognize important role of social protection and nutrition 12
  13. 13. CHALLENGES IN MAKING SOCIAL PROTECTION PROGRAMMES NUTRITION SENSITIVE 13
  14. 14. Challenges 1. Identifying and reaching the food insecure and nutritionally vulnerable populations in social protection systems especially in remote areas 2. Creating bridge between humanitarian and development programming: – Difficulties in ensuring responsiveness of SP programmes to certain types of shocks and crisis (resilience) – Creating linkages between social protection/humanitarian activities and longer term approaches to livelihoods, resilience, food security and nutrition 3. Establishing a single beneficiary register 4. Establishing multisectorial approaches: – Embedding social protection in other sectors and broader development agenda – Creating institutional mechanisms and coordination within multi-sectorial approach (social protection, health, agriculture, and education), and at different levels – Ensuring integration of behavior change communication in SP for longer term outcomes
  15. 15. Challenges (continued) 4. Financing – Ensuring adequate financial and human resources, as well as information systems and logistical arrangements – Implementing progressive taxation and ensuring predictability of financial streams – Ensuring durability/longevity of projects for sustained positive effects on food and nutrition security – Ensuring funding for SP programmes to be responsive in times of crisis (contingency funds) 5. Evaluating impact and building evidence base based on improved programme design and nutrition outcomes
  16. 16. Increasing experiences with social protection and Nutrition in region MALI SOCIALPROTECTIONPOLICIES MAURITANIA BURKINA FASO SENEGAL NIGERIA NIGER SOCIAL PROTECTION POLICY ADOPTED (2011): SOCIAL PROTECTION FLOOR AND DIALOGUE ON FOOD SECURITY AND NUTRITION (NOV 2016) IMPROVED AND SECURE ACCESS TO DIETARY DIVERSITY THROUGH SOCIAL TRANSFERS AND IMPROVED NUTRITION FOR CHILDREN. SOCIAL TRANSFERS SENSITIVE TO NUTRITION IN THE NEW NATIONAL NUTRITION POLICY SCHOOL FEEDING PROGRAMMES IN VARIOUS STATES CASH AND FOOD INTERVENTIONS IN HUMANITARIAN CONTEXT DRAFT SOCIAL PROTECTION POLICY INCLUDES CASH AND OTHER PROVISIONS FOR NUTRITIONALLY VULNERABLE FAMILIES SP STRATEGY IN PLACE SINCE 2009 SUPPORTED BY SINGLE REGISTRY. PRIORITIES ARE FOOD SECURITY; ACCESS TO HEALTH AND EDUCATION SERVICES; SOCIAL SECURITY, EMPLOYMENT LIVING ENVIRONMENT; SOCIAL SECURITY AND PROMOTION OF VULNERABLE GROUPS. 2013-2022 NATIONAL SOCIAL PROTECTION POLICY. GOVERNMENT HAS ALSO DEVELOPED A NATIONAL NUTRITION PROTOCOL, WHICH INCLUDES THE PREVENTION AND TREATMENT OF ACUTE MALNUTRITION FOR CHILDREN UNDER 5 AND PREGNANT AND NURSING MOTHERS. NATIONAL SP STRATEGY 2005-2015 IN PLACE- UPDATE ONGOING. OBJECTIVES : EQUAL STRENGTHENING AND EXPANSION, SP TOOLS FOR VULNERABLE GROUPS, PREVENTION TO SHOCKS AND NEGATIVE IMPACTS, INCREASE ACCESS AND USE OF BASIC SOCIAL SERVICES, CONTRIBUTION TO COUNTRY ECONOMIC GROWTH. GOV (&WB) PUT IN PLACE THE JIGISÈMÈJIRI SOCIAL SAFETY NETS PROGRAMME. SUPPORT FROM WB IS COVERING PART OF ONGOING WORK TO CENTRALIZE TARGETING AND ENROLLMENT OF SP BENEFICIARIES IN A SINGLE REGISTRY.
  17. 17.  Advocate for integration of nutrition, gender, food security, and health in long-term social protection programmes, interventions, and legislation  Coordinate with other sectors, including health, nutrition but also agriculture/ productive activities  Support social protection programmes in achieving nutrition objectives  Expand social protection interventions to ensure adequate coverage of nutritionally vulnerable  Ensure that social protection programmes are shock responsive in order to adjust to crisis in terms of both coverage as well as benefit size  Use variety of nutrition indicators (including sensitive) to monitor and assess effectiveness of social protection Conclusions and next steps National leadership: act to ensure necessary integration between social protection and nutrition programmes
  18. 18. Panel 1 : Links between social protection and nutrition Panel 2 : Success stories and innovative experiences Panel 3 : Sustainable financing of social protection policies
  19. 19. 19 Thank you!

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Presentation by Nita Dalmiya, UNICEF 32nd RPCA annual meeting/32e réunion annuelle du RPCA 12-14 December 2016, Abuja, Nigeria

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