Goal

Support scale up of quality wasting programming in non-emergency contexts, in alignment with the GAP Country Road Maps.

FROM Commitment: Prevention and treatment of wasting

Donor government / United States of America

USAID

Date made: 03 Dec 2021
Related event: 2021 Tokyo N4G Summit
Verification status Verified Find out more
NAF SMARTness index Lower moderate Find out more
Targeted location Global - The focus will be on USAID Nutrition Priority Countries (https://www.usaid.gov/nutrition/countries)
Targeted population Specific population group(s)
Targeted population age Specific age group(s)
Targeted population specific age Women of reproductive age and children under five years
Targeted population sex All
Primary indicator Number of USAID Missions actively engaged in scaling up wasting programming, including supporting the implementation of GAP Country Road Maps.
Primary indicator baseline There is no baseline currently available. Our 14 USAID nutrition priority countries and 4 Stategic Support Countries will be targeted for this commitment
Primary indicator target Baselines and targets will be set consistent with the work being done in our 14 USAID nutrition priority countries and 4 strategic support countries.
Duration January, 2022 - December, 2026

Goal action plan

USAID is the single largest donor globally for the treatment of wasting, however the vast majority of this support occurs in humanitarian settings, with emergency funds. Recognizing that a significant proportion of the wasting burden occurs in non-emergency contexts, USAID commits to a strategic assessment of opportunities to support the treatment and prevention of wasting through health and food systems. This will require a two-pronged approach: 1) an overarching agreed approach to USAIDÂ’s added value on wasting in non-emergency contexts, and 2) supporting field Missions to apply this in their country contexts through their country-level budgets. To this end, USAID will seek alignment with the Global Action Plan for Child Wasting and the associated Road Maps, and USAID/Washington will work with USAID/Missions to first familiarize them with the GAP and process, support them to engage with other stakeholders at the country level, and finally identify specific opportunities for USAID support.

Simultaneously, USAIDÂ’s Wasting Technical Working Group (WTWG) will build on an earlier set of consultations across colleagues representing humanitarian programming, health systems, and food systems, to continue documenting current experiences and identifying gaps and opportunities for wasting management programming. The group will begin to draft a sub-strategy on wasting focused on health systems and food systems, will collect input from the broader USAID nutrition community, and acquire leadership support.

Nutrition Action Classification

Enabling

  • Financial
  • Operational
  • Leadership and governance
  • Research monitoring and data

Policy

  • Food environment
  • Food supply chain
  • Consumer knowledge
  • Nutrition care services

Impact

  • Undernutrition
  • Diet
  • Obesity and diet-related NCDs
  • Food and nutrition security

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