Abstract

Thanks to the significant investments in the nutrition data landscape over the past decade, more data is available to support the work of nutrition policymakers, implementers, donors, advocates and researchers. Data is collected through routine administrative health information platforms (e.g., District Health Information System 2 [DHIS2]), large-scale household surveys (e.g., Demographic and Health Surveys [DHS], Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys [MICS] and Standardized Monitoring and Assessment of Relief and Transitions [SMART] surveys) and project evaluation studies or monitoring platforms (e.g., Scaling Up Nutrition Monitoring, Evaluation, Accountability and Learning [SUN MEAL] and Hunger and Nutrition Commitment Index [HANCI]). Hundreds of indicators on nutrition outcomes, intervention coverage, underlying determinants and the enabling environment are collected across global data platforms.

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