Incremental Financial Costs of Strengthening Large-Scale Programs to Improve Young Child Nutrition in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, and Vietnam: Retrospective Expenditure Analysis

Author:

Sanghvi Tina1,Homan Rick1,Nguyen Tuan1,Mahmud Zeba1,Walissa Tamirat1,Nersesyan Marina1,Preware Patricia1,Frongillo Edward2,Matheson Roger1

Affiliation:

1. Family Health International 360

2. University of South Carolina

Abstract

Abstract

Background Inattention to young child growth and development in a transitioning global environment can undermine the foundation of human capital and future progress. Diets that provide adequate energy and nutrients are critical for children's physical and cognitive development from 6 to 23.9 months of age and beyond. Still, over 70% of young children do not receive foods with sufficient nutrition particularly in low-and-middle income countries. Program evaluations have documented the effectiveness of large-scale behavior change interventions to improve children’s diets, but the budgetary implications of programs are not known. This paper provides the incremental financial costs of strengthening three large-scale programs based on expenditure records from Bangladesh, Ethiopia, and Vietnam. Results The programs reached between one and 2.5 million mothers and children annually per country at unit costs of between $0.9 to $1.6 per mother and child reached. An additional 0.7 to 1.6 million persons who were influential in supporting mothers and achieving scale were also engaged. The largest cost component was counselling of mothers. Rigorous external impact evaluations showed that over 434,500 children benefitted annually from consuming a minimum acceptable diet in all countries combined, at an annual cost per country of $6.3 to $34.7 per child benefited. Conclusions Large scale programs to improve young children’s nutrition can be affordable for low- and middle-income countries. The study provides the incremental costs of selectively strengthening key program components in diverse settings with lessons for future budgeting. The costs of treating a malnourished child are several-fold higher than prevention through improved improving young children’s dietary practices. Differences across countries in program models, coverage, costs, and outcomes suggest that countries need a minimum investment of resources for strengthening high-reach service delivery and communication channels and engaging relevant behavioral levers and community support for mothers to achieve impact at scale.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference53 articles.

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4. Shekar MK. Jakub; Dayton Eberwein, Julia; Walters, Dylan. An Investment Framework for Nutrition: Reaching the Global Targets for Stunting, Anemia, Breastfeeding, and Wasting. Washington DC: World Bank; 2017.

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