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Journal Article > ResearchFull Text

Community based management of severe acute malnutrition: The MSF experience from an urban slum setting in Bangladesh

Food Nutr Sci. 28 June 2020; Volume 11 (Issue 06); 578-589.; DOI:10.4236/fns.2020.116041
Ali E, Delchelvarie P, Shams Z, Alders P, Zachariah R
Food Nutr Sci. 28 June 2020; Volume 11 (Issue 06); 578-589.; DOI:10.4236/fns.2020.116041
BACKGROUND
Until recently, the experience on implementing community based management of acute malnutrition (CMAM) among children has been largely based in African settings. While the government in Bangladesh is yet to scale up CMAM approach, there is still paucity of knowledge on the experience of CMAM within the complex milieu of an urban slum context. In Kamrangirchar slum, Dhaka, Bangladesh, this paper describes a CMAM programme performance and outcomes run by Médecins Sans Frontières(MSF)/Doctors without Borders, in light to performance indicators set by MSF and the Sphere minimum standards.

METHODS
This was a descriptive retrospective study using routinely collected programme data of children admitted with severe acute malnutrition between May 2010 and November 2011. Kamrangirchar is an urban slum of a large migrant population in Dhaka, Bangladesh.

RESULTS
There was a total of 640 new admissions, of whom 333 (52%) were males. The median age was 18 months (Inter-quartile range (IQR) 12 - 41). 599 children had a reported nutritional outcome at discharge from ambulatory therapeutic feeding centre (ATFC), this included: cure rate of 69% with an average length of stay of 68.8 (SD ± 46.0) days and average weight gain of 3.8 g/kg/day (SD ± 2.7). The lost-to-follow-up rate was 18% and 5% reported to the programme that they will leave the slum and go back to their villages. These performance indicators did not meet the threshold level indicators set by MSF and Sphere standards.

CONCLUSIONS
Our experience highlights the need for developing more adapted and contextualised indicators for assessing the performance of CMAM programmes in settings such as urban slums. Community engagement in the process of developing relevant standards is crucial. Nutrition humanitarian actors have a vital role to collaborate with local authorities to contextualize and refine these standards
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