UNICEF – United Nations Children’s Fund,Nutrition Information Systems Consultant Jobs in Botswana

Closing date:
Thursday, 23 June 2016
Job
no:

496221
Work
type:

Consultancy
Location: Botswana
Categories: Nutrition
In
response to the current drought and building forward for future programming,
the Ministry of Health has expressed a need for nutrition data that fulfills
the following objectives

  • Improved
    targeting of interventions, including geographic targeting as well as the
    ability to predict changes in nutritional status in specific areas and
    plan accordingly
  • Setting
    of evidence-based thresholds to trigger different levels of response
    interventions
  • Demonstration
    of interventions effectiveness through observed changes in nutritional
    status of children
The
specific objectives of the assignments are to
  • Assess
    the reliability of routinely collected data for informing decision-making
  • Assess
    the relationship between the different malnutrition indicators, making
    inferences on interpretation of one indicator in the absence of the other.
    E.g. Determining the relationship between weight-for-age and
    weight-for-height to inform better interpretation of weight-for-age data
    in the absence of weight-for-height data
  • Subject
    to outcomes of the Phase I assessment (refer to Section 3 below),
    undertake analysis of existing weight-for-age, weight-for-height,
    height-for-age and MUAC data to fulfill general objectives listed above
  • Review
    and develop an immediately implementable plan for strengthening existing
    data collection and analysis system to improve quality, strengthen
    utilization and incorporate WFH and MUAC in the routine data collection,
    analysis and reporting.
The
plan must provide adequate specificity at each implementation step, draw
lessons from previous bottlenecks related to existing nutrition information
system reviews, and clearly outline alternative ways to resolve the barriers in
the short term.
CONSULTANT
SCOPE OF WORK
The
consultant will be supervised by the Health and Nutrition Specialist for UNICEF
Botswana in close collaboration with the Chief of Nutrition & Food Control
Division, Ministry of Health. The entirety of the consultant’s work will be
done in collaboration with the Nutrition Taskforce led by the Ministry of
Health with representation from UNCEF and Research Institutions as may be
deemed appropriate
The
consultancy will cover 3 work phases, with Phase I being a rapid field
assessment and data validation, phase II- analysis of existing routine data
covering a period of 12 months and all 28 Health Districts, and phase III-
review and strengthening of nutrition information systems to meet set data
utilization objectives.
Phases
I and II (described in Section 3 below) are critical rapid response steps to
the current drought, and are therefore particularly time-sensitive.
Phase
I: Rapid Field Assessment
  • Validation
    of data for weight-for-height, weight-for-age and MUAC
  • Facilitate
    planning and progress updates meetings for the taskforce
  • Develop
    methodology and tools, including sampling, for the rapid field assessment
    and validation exercise
  • In
    collaboration with MoH-Nutrition Division, prepare submissions to the
    Health Research Unit for expedited ethical clearance or waiver (as may be
    deemed appropriate by the MoH based on assessment methodology)
  • Calibrate
    anthropometric equipment to be used in the exercise
  • Train
    the taskforce on anthropometric measurements, data collection and
    recording, quality assurance, and data analysis using recognized data
    analysis packages for the activity. By the end of the Consultancy, the
    taskforce should have technical capacity to independently repeat the
    exercise
  • Develop/modify
    database for entry and analysis of Phase I data
  • Develop
    data handling protocols as appropriate
  • Oversee
    training of data collectors and quality assurance
  • Adequately
    document the process, clearly showing steps at each stage, data and
    process strengths and limitations
  • Test
    the usability/dependability of routinely collected height measurements
Analyze
stage I data to answer, at a minimum, the following questions
  • What
    is the prevalence of acute and chronic malnutrition (and underweight) in
    these communities (disaggregating by severity)?
  • How
    do weight-for-age data from this analysis compare to prevalence reported
    to the MoH. How can the difference be factored-in when interpreting
    routine data for decision-making?
  • What
    is the relationship between Weight-for-Age, and Weight-for-Height to aid
    interpretation of nutritional status changes seen in weight-for-age data
    in the absence of weight-for-height data
  • What
    is the relationship between MUAC and WFH in the Botswana context i.e. what
    proportion of children with acute malnutrition will MUAC pick in the
    absence of routine WFH measurements? This result will inform whether and
    how MUAC is built into routine programme data collection and analysis
  • Write
    a report from Phase I analysis and provide technical guidance to Phase II
    approach based on Phase I results
  • Disseminate
    the findings to key stakeholders
This
exercise will serve as a starting point for incorporation of WFH,
Height-for-Age and MUAC in routine data collection
Phase
II: Comprehensive analysis of routinely collected anthropometric data
  • Based
    on findings from Phase I, provide technical leadership to the
    comprehensive analysis of routinely collected data which has not been
    routinely analyzed and utilized
  • Develop
    a sampling framework for a statistically representative analysis of
    routine anthropometric data from all 28 Health Districts, providing technical
    guidance to the selection of health facilities and individual children
  • Train
    data entry personnel on entry and handling of data for the previous 12
    months, overseeing data cleaning and documenting data limitations as
    appropriate
  • Train
    the taskforce on all stages of Phase II analysis (it is expected that this
    small group will include Nutritionists, Statisticians and other Nutrition
    Researchers from different departments and institutions)
  • Develop/provide
    a database for data entry and analysis. The database should be modifiable
    and useable by the MoH and UNICEF beyond the duration of this consultancy,
    to enable repeat analysis every 6 months.
  • Analyze
    anthropometric data for all districts over a 12 month period to give an
    indication pf prevalence of underweight, stunting and wasting
    (disaggregating by severity)
  • Write
    a report from the Phase II data analysis, with simplified representation
    of the data for incorporation in reports to the Rural Development Council
    and other decision-makers
  • Drawing
    from relationships between indicators as determined in Phase I, provide
    guidance on interpretation of results from Phase II and beyond
  • Identify
    and facilitate linkages of the analysis results to standard governmental
    assessment processes relevant to nutrition, particularly, the Drought
    Assessment process, and the Vulnerability Assessment process
  • Write
    a policy brief for use as an advocacy tool with policy makers
  • Should
    the height measurements from Phase I be deemed of poor quality and not
    usable for the purposes of determining wasting prevalence:
  • Use
    findings from Phase I to analyze weight-for-age data from the 12 months
    period, facilitating interpretation and setting of intervention thresholds
    and monitoring intervention effectiveness in the absence of weight-for-height
    data
  • Provide
    technical guidance on alternative ways to improve the quality of height
    measurements
Phase
III: Incorporation of MUAC, weight-for-height assessments and other programme
indicators in the Botswana National Nutrition Surveillance System (or an
alternative)
  • Review
    existing nutrition data collection systems/processes in Botswana
  • Based
    on the extent of the relevance and dependability of MUAC to identify
    acutely malnourished children in Botswana, incorporate MUAC into the
    routine data collection, analysis and utilization
  • Review
    the frequency of height data collection, analysis and utilization, and
    incorporate weight-for-height into routine data collection and analysis
    for monitoring of acute malnutrition (from first point of collection to
    last point of utility)
  • Develop
    implementation plan for the revised data processes in selected priority
    districts (to be agreed with MoH)
  • Develop
    a scale-up and monitoring plan for roll-out of the revised system
  • Propose
    and define linkages of the improved routine data to standard governmental
    assessment processes relevant to nutrition, particularly, the Drought
    Assessment process, and the Vulnerability Assessment process
  • Train
    selected Taskforce members in the implementation processes
4.
DELIVERABLES Deliverable
Proposed
submission/completion date
Submission
format
Inception
report, covering all 3 phases of the consultancy (in consultation with key
partners)
24th
June 2016
Electronic-
MS Word document
Feedback
and approval of inception report
1st
July 2016
Phase
1: Rapid Field Assessment
Assessment
methodology, data handling protocols and tools, including sample size and
selection criteria
6th
July
Electronic-
MS Word document
Ethical
clearance submissions to HRDC (if necessary)
Taskforce
trained on assessment design and data analysis
13th
July 2016
Data
collection/field work teams trained (national level)
20th
July 2016
n/a
Data
collection/field work teams trained (district level)
5th
August 2016
n/a
Data
collection
19th
August 2016
Data
analysis report, answering all the specified questions (at a minimum)
5th
September 2016
Electronic-
MS Word document (for comments)
PDF
format- final
Database
with the entered and cleaned data in a useable format for analysis beyond the
consultancy(e.g. csv format ready for export to statistical analysis packages)
5th
September 2016
To
be decided during Consultancy
Phase
II: Comprehensive data analysis
Sampling
framework and selection of individual children for phase II data analysis
9th
September 2016
Electronic-
MS Word document
Database
for Phase II analysis (developed or adapted)
16th
September 2016
Data
entry personnel trained
23rd
September 2016
Taskforce
trained on Phase II analysis
28th
September 2016
Report
of Phase II analysis
14th
October 2016
Electronic-
MS Word document (for comments)
PDF
format- final
Policy
brief on nutritional status for advocacy with policy makers
18th
October 2016
Electronic-
MS Word document (for comments)
PDF
format- final
Feedback
and finalisation of report and policy brief
25th
October 2016
Advertised: Jun 09 2016 South
Africa Standard Time
Application
close:

Jun 23 2016 South Africa Standard Time
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x