Abstract
Community-based management of severe wasting (CMSW) programs have solely focused on exit outcome indicators, often omitting data on nutrition emergency preparedness and scalability. This study aimed to document good practices and generate evidence on the effectiveness and scalability of CMSW programs to guide future nutrition interventions in South Sudan. A total of 69 CMSW program implementation documents and policies were authenticated and retained for analysis, complemented with the analyses of aggregated secondary data obtained over five (2016–2020 for CMSW program performance) to six (wasting prevention) years (2014–2019). Findings suggest a strong and harmonised coordination of CMSW program implementation, facilitated timely and with quality care through an integrated and harmonised multi-agency and multidisciplinary approach. There were challenges to the institutionalisation and ownership of CMSW programs: a weak health system, fragile health budget that relied on external assistance, and limited opportunities for competency-based learning and knowledge transfer. Between 2014 and 2019, the prevalence of wasting fluctuated according to the agricultural cycle and remained above the emergency threshold of 15% during the July to August lean season. However, during the same period, under-five and crude mortality rates (10,000/day) declined respectively from 1.17 (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.91, 1.43) and 1.00 (95% CI: 0.75, 1.25) to 0.57 (95% CI: 0.38, 0.76) and 0.55 (95% CI: 0.39, 0.70). Both indicators remained below the emergency thresholds, hence suggesting that the emergency response was under control. Over a five-year period (2016–2020), a total of 1,105,546 children (52% girls, 48% boys) were admitted to CMSW programs. The five-year pooled performance indicators (mean [standard deviations]) was 86.4 (18.9%) for recovery, 2.1 (7.8%) for deaths, 5.2 (10.3%) for defaulting, 1.7 (5.7%) for non-recovery, 4.6 (13.5%) for medical transfers, 2.2 (4.7%) for relapse, 3.3 (15.0) g/kg/day for weight gain velocity, and 6.7 (3.7) weeks for the length of stay in the program. In conclusion, all key performance indicators, except the weight gain velocity, met or exceeded the Humanitarian Charter and Minimum Standards in Humanitarian Response. Our findings demonstrate the possibility of implementing robust and resilient CMSAM programs in protracted conflict environments, informed by global guidelines and protocols. They also depict challenges to institutionalisation and ownership.
Highlights
South Sudan has experienced armed conflicts, a pattern that continued after it gained independence from Sudan on 9 July 2011 [1,2]
A total of 25 food security and nutrition monitoring system (FSNMS) surveys were completed by 2019 but our study focused on data from round 14 onward
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) oversaw all programs associated with the prevention, treatment, and management of severe wasting whilst World Food Programme (WFP) coordinated and managed all programs pertaining to the treatment and the management of moderate wasting
Summary
South Sudan has experienced armed conflicts, a pattern that continued after it gained independence from Sudan on 9 July 2011 [1,2]. Since its independence, the country has been characterised by weak state structures; stunted economic, social, and political progress; and mass population displacements [2,3,4] These factors have led to the country’s inability to fully meet the basic human needs of its population. The food crisis is a result of the confluence of insecurity, conflict-related displacements, and increasing food prices [9], and unhealthy coping strategies can be multidimensional They may encompass the sale of assets, resorting to low quality or nutritionally inferior diets, limiting portion size or skipping meals to allow small children to eat, and sending household members away to work, beg, gather wild food, or hunt [10]. The report estimated that 108,000 people would experience food catastrophe throughout 2021 (i.e., an extreme lack of food and/or other basic needs, with evident starvation, death, destitution and extremely high levels of acute malnutrition) [9]
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