The Nutrition Accountability Framework (NAF) created the world’s first independent and comprehensive platform for registering SMART commitments to take action on nutrition and monitor that action. The NAF Commitment Tracker launched in September 2022 is the only place you can explore all registered commitments for a detailed insight into what action is being committed where, by whom and with what purpose.
Use the filters and search bar below to view commitments to take action on malnutrition by organisation type, thematic or geographic focus area, cost or other criteria. Within each commitment, you can view further information about each of that commitment’s goals. The full dataset used by the tracker is downloadable, enabling independent analysis.
The NAF Commitment Tracker is the most comprehensive source of information on nutrition commitments globally. As well as being the official tracker for Nutrition for Growth (N4G) commitments, new commitments from any stakeholder can be registered at any time. The tracker will be updated monthly with new commitments and additions to existing commitments, where possible, if information was previously missing or unclear.
The NAF Commitment Tracker shines a light on commitments made across the world to end malnutrition in all its forms, and creates a level playing field by providing common standards, tools and guidance for measuring nutrition action. In the future, stakeholders who have registered commitments will be able to share progress reports, helping them highlight successes, share best practice and learn from each other’s efforts. This will support efforts to monitor progress, understand what is working, and identify where greater action is needed; strengthening transparency and accountability to drive nutrition action.
For commitments made at the London 2013 and Milan 2017 Nutrition for Growth Summits, see the Nutrition for Growth Commitment Tracker.
Showing 71 to 80 of 428 results
Food and Nutrition Council
- Zimbabwe
- 5 partner organisations
Commitment made: 08 Dec 2021
national development strategy
Goals
Support community demand-generation and social accountability on prevailing livelihoods, food and nutrition security
- Nutrition Action Classification: Enabling > Research monitoring and data
- Goal SMARTness index: High
Enforce existing legal instruments and establish new ones as per need.
- Nutrition Action Classification: Enabling > Leadership and governance
- Goal SMARTness index: High
Reduce the prevalence of under-five stunting from 23.5% to 17% by 2025
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Undernutrition
- Goal SMARTness index: High
Ensure that the multi-sectoral and multi-stakeholder policy implementation structures remain active and are accountable for implementation, monitoring and evaluation of nutrition response
- Nutrition Action Classification: Enabling > Leadership and governance
- Goal SMARTness index: High
Increase Public Health Expenditure Per Capita from USD$30.29 in 2020 to USD$86 by 2025.
- Nutrition Action Classification: Enabling > Financial
- Goal SMARTness index: High
Avail food and nutrition security information for policy, programming and targets tracking by 2025
- Nutrition Action Classification: Enabling > Research monitoring and data
- Goal SMARTness index: High
Operationalise a costed Multisectoral FNS Strategy with accompanying M and E framework
- Nutrition Action Classification: Enabling > Leadership and governance
- Goal SMARTness index: High
Reduction in the prevalence of iron deficiency anaemia in women of child bearing age from 27% to 13% by 2025
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Undernutrition
- Goal SMARTness index: High
Advocate for investment allocations for social services to be nutrition sensitive (including health, agriculture, education, and social protection).
- Nutrition Action Classification: Enabling > Leadership and governance
- Goal SMARTness index: Lower moderate
Ministry of Planning and International Cooperation
- Yemen
- 5 partner organisations
Commitment made: 08 Dec 2021
Nutrition into ESP to achieve UHC
Goals
Increase the percentage of nutrition-specific interventions implemented through UHC that achieve annual programme coverage targets
- Nutrition Action Classification: Enabling > Research monitoring and data
- Goal SMARTness index: High
Reduce prevalence of stunting in children under 5 years
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Undernutrition
- Goal SMARTness index: High
Reduce prevalence of wasting in children under 5 years
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Undernutrition
- Goal SMARTness index: High
National Development Planning Commission
- Ghana
- 5 partner organisations
Commitment made: 08 Dec 2021
Nutrition for Growth Commitments
Goals
By 2025, the Government of Ghana will reduce the prevalence of overweight in women aged 18 years and older from 41.0% in 2016 to 17%
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Obesity and diet-related NCDs
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2025, the Government of Ghana will reduce the prevalence of obesity in women aged 18 years and older from 16.6% in 2016 to 7%
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Obesity and diet-related NCDs
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2030, the Government of Ghana will reduce the consumption of sodium from 3.2 g/d to 2.2 g/d.
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Diet
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2025, the Government of Ghana will reduce the prevalence of iron deficiency anaemia (IDA) in children under 5 years of age from 12.2% in 2017 to 8%
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Undernutrition
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2028, the Government of Ghana will increase the production of climate-resilient varieties of diverse vegetables and legumes, fruits, and biofortified staple crops using sustainable agricultural practices by 40% (over …
- Nutrition Action Classification: Policy > Food supply chain
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2028, the Government of Ghana will expand the proportion of land area under irrigated agriculture (to produce mainly cereals, vegetables and fruits) from 11.9% to 20%
- Nutrition Action Classification: Policy > Food supply chain
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2024, the Government of Ghana will enact policies to eliminate industrially-produced trans-fatty acids and reduce the impact of marketing of foods and beverages high in saturated fats, trans-fatty acids, …
- Nutrition Action Classification: Policy > Food environment
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2022, the Government of Ghana will develop and implement a comprehensive Food and Nutrition Security Strategy, which will lead to at least 30% of infant and young children receiving …
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Diet
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2023, the Government of Ghana will jointly agree with multilateral agencies, civil society, and donors on coordination and oversight mechanisms for reducing and preventing malnutrition, and set in place …
- Nutrition Action Classification: Enabling > Research monitoring and data
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2024, the Government of Ghana will compile, consolidate, and update local food composition databases, and develop a nutrient profiling system to facilitate implementation of a package of food-based policies …
- Nutrition Action Classification: Enabling > Research monitoring and data
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2024, the Government of Ghana will increase maternity leave to 14 weeks to be implemented across all sectors of the economy and complete national multi-stakeholder discussions on the "Who …
- Nutrition Action Classification: Policy > Food environment
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2028, the Government of Ghana will reduce food losses from 20% to 10%
- Nutrition Action Classification: Policy > Food supply chain
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2025, the Government of Ghana will reduce the prevalence of stunting in children under age five from 21.4% in 2017 to 14%
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Undernutrition
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2025, the Government of Ghana will reduce the prevalence of childhood wasting from 7.1% in 2017 to less than 5%
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Undernutrition
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2023, the Government of Ghana will develop and implement food-based dietary guidelines that define context-specific sustainable healthy diets
- Nutrition Action Classification: Enabling > Research monitoring and data
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2028, the Government of Ghana will reduce food wastes from 84 kg/capita/year (in 2015) to 60 kg/capita/year
- Nutrition Action Classification: Policy > Food environment
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2022, the Government of Ghana will develop and implement a comprehensive Food and Nutrition Security Strategy, which will lead to 36% of infant and young children meeting the minimum …
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Diet
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2025, the Government of Ghana will reduce the prevalence of iron deficiency (ID) in children under 5 years of age from 21.5% in 2017 to 15%
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Undernutrition
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2030, the Government of Ghana will achieve seed security, breed security and land security for Ghanaian farmers, especially women and youth; and develop and implement well-structured training programmes for …
- Nutrition Action Classification: Enabling > Operational
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2023, the Government of Ghana will ensure that government plans, policies, and strategies are climate compliant, risk-informed, conflict-sensitive, shock responsive, costed, multi-sectoral, and aligned with concrete targets to prevent …
- Nutrition Action Classification: Enabling > Leadership and governance
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2025, the Government of Ghana will reduce the prevalence of anaemia in women of reproductive age from 21% in 2018 to 14%
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Undernutrition
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2025, the Government of Ghana will increase the percentage of exclusive breastfeeding for 6 months from 42.9% in 2017 to 62%, led by the Ministries of Health; and Gender, …
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Diet
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2025, the Government of Ghana will increase the percentage of early initiation of breastfeeding within 1 hour from 52% in 2017 to 80%, led by the Ministries of Health; …
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Diet
- Goal SMARTness index: High
By 2030, the Government of Ghana will reduce the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages from 32.4 g/d to 15 g/d
- Nutrition Action Classification: Impact > Diet
- Goal SMARTness index: High