The SMARTness of nutrition commitments

Footnotes

  1. International Food Policy Research Institute. Global Nutrition Report – From Promise to Impact: Ending Malnutrition by 2030. 2016 (doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.2499/9780896295841).

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  2. United Nations. Advancing the Global Nutrition Agenda. 2016. Available at: www.un.org/nutrition/sites/www.un.org.nutrition/files/general/pdf/2-nutrition_decade_flyer_commitments_for_web.pdf; WHO. Global Nutrition Targets 2025: Policy Brief Series. 2014; NCD Alliance. Ambitious, SMART Commitments to Address NCDs, Overweight & Obesity: Make the UN Decade of Action on Nutrition Count for All Forms of Malnutrition. World Cancer Research Fund International, NCD Alliance, 2017. Available at: https://ncdalliance.org/resources/ambitious-smart-commitments-to-address-ncds-overweight-and-obesity

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  3. WHO/UNICEF. The Extension of the 2025 Maternal, Infant and Young Child Nutrition Targets to 2030. 2019.

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  4. Ismail S, Immink M, Nantel G. Improving Nutrition Programmes: An Assessment Tool for Action. 2005.

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  5. NCD Alliance. Ambitious, SMART Commitments to Address NCDs, Overweight & Obesity: Make the UN Decade of Action on Nutrition Count for All Forms of Malnutrition. World Cancer Research Fund International, NCD Alliance, 2017. Available at: https://ncdalliance.org/resources/ambitious-smart-commitments-to-address-ncds-overweight-and-obesity; Fanzo J, Hawkes C, Rosettie K. Global Nutrition Report Guidance Note: Making SMARTer Commitments to Nutrition Action. 2016; FAO, WHO. Towards Country-Specific SMART Commitments for Action on Nutrition. 2016.

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  6. See for example: Sustainable Development Goals Partnerships Platform. https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/partnerships/. Accessed 20 August 2021

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  7. Nutrition for Growth. Commitment-Making Guide. 2021.

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  8. Doran GT. There’s a S.M.A.R.T. way to write management’s goals and objectives. Manage Rev 1981; 70(11): 35–36.

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  9. FAO. Integrating the Right to Adequate Food in National Food and Nutrition Security Policies and Programmes – Practical Approaches to Policy and Programme Analysis. 2014; CDC. Evaluation Guide – Developing and Using a Logic Model. 2017. Available at: www.conservationgateway.org/ConservationPlanning/partnering/cpc/Documents/CDC_LogicModelGuide.pdf; Ross MM, Kolbash S, Cohen GM, Skelton JA. Multidisciplinary treatment of pediatric obesity: Nutrition evaluation and management. Nutr Clin Pract 2010; 25(4): 327–334 (doi: 10.1177/0884533610373771); CDC. Evaluation Guide – Writing SMART Objectives. 2013. Available at: www.cdc.gov/dhdsp/docs/smart_objectives.pdf

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  10. CDC. Evaluation Guide – Writing SMART Objectives. 2013. Available at: www.cdc.gov/dhdsp/docs/smart_objectives.pdf; Michigan Nutrition Standards. Smart Goal. 2012. Available at: www.michigan.gov/documents/mdch/15._Smart_Goals_392707_7.pdf

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  11. Michigan Nutrition Standards. Smart Goal. 2012. Available at: www.michigan.gov/documents/mdch/15._Smart_Goals_392707_7.pdf; CDC. Writing SMART Objectives – Evaluation Briefs. 2018. Available at: www.cdc.gov/

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  12. Nutrition for Growth. Commitment-Making Guide. 2021.

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  13. Coverage Monitoring Network. Formulating a Strategy & Action Plan. 2021. Available at: www.coverage-monitoring.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Formulating-a-Strategy-Action-Plan-Training-Pack-Step-1.pdf

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  14. WHO. Global Nutrition Targets 2025: Policy Brief Series. 2014.

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  15. WHO. Global Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of NCDs 2013–2020.

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  16. Requirements may vary by linked event. The GNR is not responsible for assessing compliance with such requirements, unless specified.

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  17. Nutrition for Growth. Commitment-Making Guide. 2021.

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  18. Access To Nutrition Initiative. Global Access to Nutrition Index 2021. Methodology, Development, Structure, Scope, Contents, Scoring and Results Presentation. 2020.

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  19. Stakeholders are encouraged to register their nutrition commitments with the GNR’s Nutrition Accountability Framework by 31 October 2021. The date of the Tokyo N4G summit will be the hard deadline to register and accept commitments for the Nutrition Year of Action. For commitments registered by 31 October 2021, the GNR will perform a basic level of verification, including verifying the self-reported stakeholder group, commitment type and thematic area. The Access to Nutrition Initiative (ATNI) will verify compliance of breast-milk substitute manufacturers with the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes. For commitments registered after 31 October and by 8 December 2021, no verification will be performed in time for the Tokyo summit and so these commitments may not be featured in the summit. All registered commitments will be included in the Compact (Annex), the outcome document of the summit. After the summit, the GNR will begin the full verification (including for SMARTness) and the analysis of commitments made during the Nutrition Year of Action. During that period, the GNR will engage with commitment-makers to refine the level of information provided, as needed, and ensure to the extent possible that all commitments are SMART. The commitments and their analyses will be published on the GNR website and as part of a GNR report on the Year of Action to be released in 2022. Thereafter, progress on the commitments will be reported, assessed and published annually. The registration form will remain open for stakeholders to make nutrition commitments when they want (not linked to the Nutrition Year of Action or the Tokyo N4G summit).

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  20. Nutrition for Growth. Commitment-Making Guide. 2021.

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