Transcript TITLE PAGE

Emergency
Immediate
Pre-Crisis
Response Phase
Increasing depth
Preparedness
data collection
Beyond the
Immediate Response
Tracking
Mulit-sectoral
Rapid
Assessment
(qualitative &
secondary
quantitative)
Sector-specific rapid
assessments
Early warning systems
Surveillance
Multi-sectoral survey
Follow-up survey:
Health/Nutr/
Food/WASH/etc
(probability sample):
Health/Nutr/
Food/WASH/etc
Periodic surveys
In-depth sector studies
Existing research/studies
(quantitative/qualitative)
Preparedness Monitoring
Sudden
onset
Performance Monitoring
1 wk
6-8 wks
3-6 mo
1 year
The IYCF Assessment Process:
Assessment Objectives
Initial Rapid Assessment (often a multi-sectoral rapid assessment):
•
Provides a rapid overview of the situation related to IYCF in order to
identify the immediate impacts of the crisis and estimate the needs of
the affected population for assistance (funding and personnel) in the
first weeks following the crisis
•
Timing: as soon as possible(within days) after acute onset emergency
2nd Stage or more Comprehensive (in-depth) Assessment (sector-specific):
•
A more thorough analysis that provides information to more thoroughly
assess the situation, to inform program development, determine resource
requirements, and disseminate additional information to the international
community. Often includes:
 Sector-specific rapid assessment (SSRA)
 Survey data (can be single-sector or multi-sectoral: nutritional,
anthropometry, IYCF practices, other data): to document baseline

Timing: as soon as appropriate resources and experience are available (13 weeks)
IYCF Assessment Process
Key information (Ops Guidance)
Initial Rapid Assessment (IRA; often multi-sectoral MSRA):
•
Demographic profile. Are the following groups under or overrepresented: infants, pg women, orphans/unaccompanied children?
•
Feeding practices pre-crisis; any observable changes. Observed and precrisis approaches to feeding orphaned infants (including acceptability of
wet-nursing).
•
Reported problems (by population, by health staff) feeding infants and
young children (including BF difficulties, poor access to infant
complementary foods)
•
Conspicuous availability of BMS, milk products, bottles and teats in
population or commodity pipeline
•
Who is available to provide immediate assistance?
•
[Situation related to mortality, morbidity, nutritional status of
infants/young children]
•
[Security risks to women and children]
IYCF Assessment Process
Additional information (Ops Guidance)
Comprehensive Assessment (SSRA): obtain information on the following
• Food situation
-- Nutritional adequacy of food ration; availability of appropriate foods for infant
complementary feeding (in general ration; in targeted feeding programmes); food
sitn for pg and lactating women
-- Presence of donations; type; management; public awareness of donations
• Health environment
-- water quantity and quality, fuel, sanitation, housing, facilities for food
preparation and cooking
-- support offered by health facilities providing antenatal, delivery, postnatal and
child care
• Care environment
-- feeding: feeding techniques (cup, bottle, management and use; methods of
encouraging complementary feeding); any factors disrupting breastfeeding
-- capacity of potential support givers (BF mothers, trained HWs, trained IYCF
counsellors, experienced women from community)
-- identify key decision-makers at HH, community andlocal health facility level
IYCF Assessment Process
Additional information (Ops Guidance)
Comprehensive Assessment: information from Surveys
• Population statistics: numbers of accompanied and unaccompanied
infants and young children <24 months (data stratified by age: 05 months, 6-11 months, 12-23 months), children aged 24-59
months (2-5 years), pregnant and lactating women
• Morbidity and mortality of infants
• Receipt of food at HH level
• Infant and young child feeding practices
-- questions for calculation of standard indicators
-- questions on receipt of donated BMS and bottles, and use in
past 24 hours