National nutrition surveillance programmes in 18 countries in SouthEast Asia and Western Pacific Regions: a systematic scoping review

Remco Peters,Bai Li,Boyd Swinburn,Steven Allender,Zouyan He,Sim Yee Lim,Mary Chea,Gangqiang Ding,Weiwen Zhou, Phonesavanh Keonakhone, Maikho Vongxay, Souphaxay Khamphanthong,Rusidah Selamat, Azucena Dayanghirang, Ellen Abella, Filipe Da Costa,Saipin Chotivichien, Narttaya Ungkanavin,Mai Tuyet Truong,Son Duy Nguyen,Bee Koon Poh

BULLETIN OF THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION(2023)

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摘要
Objective To identify and analyse ongoing nutrition-related surveillance programmes led and/or funded by national authorities in countries in South-East Asian and Western Pacific Regions. Methods We systematically searched for publications in PubMed((R)) and Scopus, manually searched the grey literature and consulted with national health and nutrition officials, with no restrictions on publication type or language. We included low- and middle-income countries in the World Health Organization South-East Asia Region, and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and China. We analysed the included programmes by adapting the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's public health surveillance evaluation framework. Findings We identified 82 surveillance programmes in 18 countries that repeatedly collect, analyse and disseminate data on nutrition and/or related indicators. Seventeen countries implemented a national periodic survey that exclusively collects nutrition-outcome indicators, often alongside internationally linked survey programmes. Coverage of different subpopulations and monitoring frequency vary substantially across countries. We found limited integration of food environment and wider food system indicators in these programmes, and no programmes specifically monitor nutrition-sensitive data across the food system. There is also limited nutrition-related surveillance of people living in urban deprived areas. Most surveillance programmes are digitized, use measures to ensure high data quality and report evidence of flexibility; however, many are inconsistently implemented and rely on external agencies' financial support. Conclusion Efforts to improve the time efficiency, scope and stability of national nutrition surveillance, and integration with other sectoral data, should be encouraged and supported to allow systemic monitoring and evaluation of malnutrition interventions in these countries.
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