Strengthening Economic Evaluation for Multisectoral Strategies (SEEMS) – Nutrition: Common Approach Guidance Document

Combating malnutrition requires a coordinated effort across sectors. While there is a growing body of evidence on what works to improve maternal and child nutrition, comparable evidence on the costs and cost-effectiveness of multisectoral nutrition strategies has been limited (Keats et al 2021, Ruel...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Levin, Carol, Tokos Harp, Lorna, Crocker, J., Wun, J., Kemp, C., Choo, E., Margolies, Amy, Gelli, Aulo
Format: Training Material
Language:Inglés
Published: University of Washington 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159892
_version_ 1855533038411186176
author Levin, Carol
Tokos Harp, Lorna
Crocker, J.
Wun, J.
Kemp, C.
Choo, E.
Margolies, Amy
Gelli, Aulo
author_browse Choo, E.
Crocker, J.
Gelli, Aulo
Kemp, C.
Levin, Carol
Margolies, Amy
Tokos Harp, Lorna
Wun, J.
author_facet Levin, Carol
Tokos Harp, Lorna
Crocker, J.
Wun, J.
Kemp, C.
Choo, E.
Margolies, Amy
Gelli, Aulo
author_sort Levin, Carol
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Combating malnutrition requires a coordinated effort across sectors. While there is a growing body of evidence on what works to improve maternal and child nutrition, comparable evidence on the costs and cost-effectiveness of multisectoral nutrition strategies has been limited (Keats et al 2021, Ruel et al. 2018, Swinnen et al. 2018 and Wun et al. 2022). Decision makers rely on available evidence to inform strategic planning, priority setting and resource allocation for multisectoral nutrition programming. The lack of reliable, robust, and comparable economic evaluation information impedes the ability of funders, policymakers and program managers to make informed decisions about which interventions to prioritize to improve nutrition outcomes and achieve nutrition-related development targets. It is crucial to close the data gap in evidence on the costs and cost-effectiveness of nutrition-sensitive interventions within multisectoral programs. The most useful information from economic evaluations of nutrition programs will be data that is robust, data that is collected using transparent, comparable, standardized methods, and data that can directly inform decision making. The Strengthening Economic Evaluation for Multisectoral Strategies for Nutrition (SEEMS-Nutrition) consortium has developed a common approach to conduct costing studies that is integrated with program impact evaluations for multisector nutrition programs. The common approach aims to strengthen the design and implementation of economic evaluations, with a focus on context-specific operational plans, or study protocols. It utilizes a comprehensive and fully customizable set of cost data collection tools for estimating financial and economic costs. This guidance document is a how-to guide on the common approach that can be applied by practitioners, field researchers, evaluators, and implementors. For more on the SEEMS-Nutrition project, including applications in Malawi, Bangladesh, and Nepal (forthcoming), please see the R4D Project Page and the SEEMS-Nutrition website.
format Training Material
id CGSpace159892
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher University of Washington
publisherStr University of Washington
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1598922024-12-12T15:16:09Z Strengthening Economic Evaluation for Multisectoral Strategies (SEEMS) – Nutrition: Common Approach Guidance Document Levin, Carol Tokos Harp, Lorna Crocker, J. Wun, J. Kemp, C. Choo, E. Margolies, Amy Gelli, Aulo nutrition maternal and child health policies economic analysis development evaluation Combating malnutrition requires a coordinated effort across sectors. While there is a growing body of evidence on what works to improve maternal and child nutrition, comparable evidence on the costs and cost-effectiveness of multisectoral nutrition strategies has been limited (Keats et al 2021, Ruel et al. 2018, Swinnen et al. 2018 and Wun et al. 2022). Decision makers rely on available evidence to inform strategic planning, priority setting and resource allocation for multisectoral nutrition programming. The lack of reliable, robust, and comparable economic evaluation information impedes the ability of funders, policymakers and program managers to make informed decisions about which interventions to prioritize to improve nutrition outcomes and achieve nutrition-related development targets. It is crucial to close the data gap in evidence on the costs and cost-effectiveness of nutrition-sensitive interventions within multisectoral programs. The most useful information from economic evaluations of nutrition programs will be data that is robust, data that is collected using transparent, comparable, standardized methods, and data that can directly inform decision making. The Strengthening Economic Evaluation for Multisectoral Strategies for Nutrition (SEEMS-Nutrition) consortium has developed a common approach to conduct costing studies that is integrated with program impact evaluations for multisector nutrition programs. The common approach aims to strengthen the design and implementation of economic evaluations, with a focus on context-specific operational plans, or study protocols. It utilizes a comprehensive and fully customizable set of cost data collection tools for estimating financial and economic costs. This guidance document is a how-to guide on the common approach that can be applied by practitioners, field researchers, evaluators, and implementors. For more on the SEEMS-Nutrition project, including applications in Malawi, Bangladesh, and Nepal (forthcoming), please see the R4D Project Page and the SEEMS-Nutrition website. 2023 2024-11-18T16:22:06Z 2024-11-18T16:22:06Z Training Material https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159892 en https://r4d.org/projects/strengthening-economic-evaluation-for-multisectoral-strategies-for-nutrition-seems/ https://sites.google.com/uw.edu/seems-nutrition/home?authuser=0 Open Access University of Washington Levin, C.; Tokos Harp, L.; Crocker, J.; Wun, J.; Kemp, C.; Choo, E.; Margolies, Amy; and Gelli, Aulo. 2023. Strengthening Economic Evaluation for Multisectoral Strategies (SEEMS) – Nutrition: Common Approach Guidance Document. University of Washington. https://doi.org/10.6069/JMVV-HH97
spellingShingle nutrition
maternal and child health
policies
economic analysis
development
evaluation
Levin, Carol
Tokos Harp, Lorna
Crocker, J.
Wun, J.
Kemp, C.
Choo, E.
Margolies, Amy
Gelli, Aulo
Strengthening Economic Evaluation for Multisectoral Strategies (SEEMS) – Nutrition: Common Approach Guidance Document
title Strengthening Economic Evaluation for Multisectoral Strategies (SEEMS) – Nutrition: Common Approach Guidance Document
title_full Strengthening Economic Evaluation for Multisectoral Strategies (SEEMS) – Nutrition: Common Approach Guidance Document
title_fullStr Strengthening Economic Evaluation for Multisectoral Strategies (SEEMS) – Nutrition: Common Approach Guidance Document
title_full_unstemmed Strengthening Economic Evaluation for Multisectoral Strategies (SEEMS) – Nutrition: Common Approach Guidance Document
title_short Strengthening Economic Evaluation for Multisectoral Strategies (SEEMS) – Nutrition: Common Approach Guidance Document
title_sort strengthening economic evaluation for multisectoral strategies seems nutrition common approach guidance document
topic nutrition
maternal and child health
policies
economic analysis
development
evaluation
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159892
work_keys_str_mv AT levincarol strengtheningeconomicevaluationformultisectoralstrategiesseemsnutritioncommonapproachguidancedocument
AT tokosharplorna strengtheningeconomicevaluationformultisectoralstrategiesseemsnutritioncommonapproachguidancedocument
AT crockerj strengtheningeconomicevaluationformultisectoralstrategiesseemsnutritioncommonapproachguidancedocument
AT wunj strengtheningeconomicevaluationformultisectoralstrategiesseemsnutritioncommonapproachguidancedocument
AT kempc strengtheningeconomicevaluationformultisectoralstrategiesseemsnutritioncommonapproachguidancedocument
AT chooe strengtheningeconomicevaluationformultisectoralstrategiesseemsnutritioncommonapproachguidancedocument
AT margoliesamy strengtheningeconomicevaluationformultisectoralstrategiesseemsnutritioncommonapproachguidancedocument
AT gelliaulo strengtheningeconomicevaluationformultisectoralstrategiesseemsnutritioncommonapproachguidancedocument