Qualitative Review of National Nutrition Surveillance Systems in the Eastern Mediterranean Region

Author:

Al Jawaldeh Ayoub1ORCID,El Hajj Hassan Ola2ORCID,Qureshi Abdul Baseer3,Zerbo Ferima Coulibaly4,Alahnoumy Shafekah4,Bozo Mahmoud5,Al-Halaika Mousa6,Al-Dakheel Mushary H.7,Alhamdan Lamya7,Mujib Sahibzada Azhar7,El Ammari Laila8ORCID,Aguenaou Hassan9ORCID,Alqaoud Nawal10,Almaamari Salima11,Alshamkhi Saleh11,Dureab Fekri212ORCID

Affiliation:

1. World Health Organization (WHO), Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean, Cairo 7608, Egypt

2. Heidelberg Institute of Global Health, Hospital University Heidelberg, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany

3. World Health Organization (WHO), Khartoum 2234, Sudan

4. World Health Organization (WHO), Sana’a 543, Yemen

5. World Health Organization (WHO), Damascus 3946, Syria

6. Nutrition Department, Ministry of Health, Ramallah 4284, Palestine

7. Nutrition Department, Ministry of Health, Riyadh 11176, Saudi Arabia

8. Nutrition Department, Ministry of Health, Rabat 335, Morocco

9. Joint Research Unit in Nutrition and Food, RDC-Nutrition AFRA/IAEA, Ibn Tofaïl University-CNESTEN, Rabat-Kénitra 242, Morocco

10. Food and Nutrition Administration, Ministry of Health, Kuwait City 13001, Kuwait

11. Nutrition Department, Ministry of Health, Muscat 393, Oman

12. Institute of Research for International Assistance, Akkon Hochschule, 12099 Berlin, Germany

Abstract

The World Food Conference in 1974 emphasized the significance of establishing global nutrition surveillance to monitor and address nutritional challenges effectively. However, many countries, especially in the EMRO region, continue to encounter substantial difficulties in regularly generating disaggregated data on nutrition. The current study aimed to review the existing nutrition surveillance systems in the region and to identify their strengths and weaknesses, as well as the challenges they face in functioning optimally. Methods: This study focused on the functional nutrition surveillance systems in eight Arab countries; namely Kuwait, Morocco, Oman, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen. The study’s analysis involved utilizing primary data collected from both published and unpublished reports. Additionally, a structured checklist was employed to gather information from all countries involved in the study. Furthermore, interviews were conducted with the EMRO offices to gain deeper insights into the challenges, if any, that these nutrition surveillance systems face in functioning optimally. Results: All countries use health facilities as a basic source of data for their nutrition surveillance, some countries triangulate their nutrition surveillance reports with data from other sources of information such as community or school surveys. Identified nutrition surveillance approaches are closely split between those who operate in stable settings and use routine health information systems (Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Oman, and Kuwait) and other countries that operate in fragile settings; for example, Yemen, Syria, Palestine, and Sudan struggle to provide early warning reports for rapid nutritional responses. Conclusions: Nutrition surveillance systems that utilize existing health information systems are the most sustained in the EMRO region. However, by integrating data from multiple sources, such as health facilities, surveys, and population censuses, countries can provide a holistic view of the nutritional situation, enhance their response to any emergency, and can leverage the infrastructure and resources already in place for health data collection and reporting. Collaboration between countries in the region through sharing experiences and success stories is important in order to reach a standardized system that can be implemented in different settings.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

Reference17 articles.

1. International Food Policy Research Institute. 2014. Washington, DC: Global Nutrition Report 2014: Actions and accountability to accelerate the world’s progress on nutrition;McGuire;Adv. Nutr.,2015

2. Al Jawaldeh, A., Osman, D., and Tawfik, A. (2013). World Health Organization. Food and Nutrition Surveillance Systems: A Technical Guide for the Development of a Food and Nutrition Surveillance System for Countries in the Eastern Mediterranean Region, WHO.

3. A systematic review of childhood obesity in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region: Prevalence and risk factors meta-analysis;Farrag;Adv. Pediatr. Res.,2017

4. Friedman, G. (2014). Review of National Nutrition Surveillance Systems, FHI 360/FANTA.

5. AlSumaie, M. (2011). First Regional Nutrition Conference-Nutrition Challenges in the East Mediterranean Region, WHO.

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