Building systemic capacity for Nutrition: Training towards a professionalised workforce for Africa.
Name:
capacity final amended April 9 ...
Size:
320.6Kb
Format:
PDF
Request:
draft paper accepted
Affiliation
University of Chester; University of Kumasi; University of Central Lancashire; University of Greenwich; University of SouthamptonPublication Date
2015-06-15
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The fundamental role played by good nutrition in enabling personal, social and economic development is now widely recognised as presenting a fundamental global challenge that has to be addressed if major national and international problems are to be resolved in the coming decades. The recent focus provided by the Millennium Development Goals and the Scaling-Up-Nutrition (SUN) Movement has been towards reducing the extent of nutrition-related malnutrition in high burden countries. This has served to emphasise that there is a problem of inadequate professional capacity in nutrition that is sufficiently widespread to severely limit all attempts at the effective delivery and sustainability of nutrition-related and nutrition-enabling interventions that have impact at scale. Many high burden countries are in sub-Saharan Africa where there is a high dependency on external technical support to address nutrition-related problems. We have sought to explore the nature and magnitude of the capacity needs with a particular focus on achieving levels of competency within standardised professional pre-service training which is fit for purpose to meet the objectives within the Scaling-Up-Nutrition movement in Africa. We review our experience of engaging with stakeholders through workshops and a gap analysis of the extent of the problem to be addressed, and a review of current efforts in Africa. We conclude that there are high aspirations but severely limited human resource and capacity for training that is fit-for-purpose at all skill levels in nutrition-related subjects in Africa. There are no structured or collaborative plans within professional groups to address the wide gap between what is currently available, the ongoing needs and the future expectations for meeting local technical and professional capability. Programmatic initiatives encouraged by agencies and other external players, will need to be matched by improved local capabilities to address the serious efforts required to meet the needs for sustained improvements related to Scaling-Up-Nutrition in high burden countries. Importantly, there are pockets of effort which need to be encouraged within a context in which experience can be shared and mutual support provided.Citation
Ellahi, B., Annan, R., Sarkar, S., Amuna, P., & Jackson, A. (2015). Building systemic capacity for Nutrition: Training towards a professionalised workforce for Africa. Proceedings of Nutrition Society, 74(4), 496–504. DOI:Publisher
Cambridge University PressJournal
Proceedings of Nutrition SocietyAdditional Links
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=PNSType
Meetings and ProceedingsLanguage
enEISSN
1475-2719ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1017/S0029665115002062
Scopus Count
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: