Facultad de Medicina, Departamento de Nutrición, Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos (UNMSM), Lima, Perú.
Centre for Global Health and Human Development, School of Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences, Loughborough University, Loughborough, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2024 May 20;19(5):e0303668. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0303668. eCollection 2024.
Multiple forms of malnutrition coexist in infants and young children (IYC) in Peru. The World Health Organization has proposed double-duty actions (DDAs) to simultaneously address undernutrition and overweight/obesity. We assessed current implementation of- and priority for- government-level actions to tackle multiple forms of malnutrition in IYC in Peru. Mapping of current policy activity was undertaken against 47 indicators of good practice for five DDAs (exclusive breastfeeding, complementary feeding, food marketing, maternal nutrition, preschool nutrition; assessed by 27 indicators) and for the enabling policy environment, i.e., 'infrastructure support' (health in all policies, platforms for interactions, financing, monitoring, governance, leadership; assessed by 20 indicators). Interviews with 16 national experts explored views on the level of and barriers to implementation of DDAs and infrastructure support, as well as their prioritisation based on likely impact and feasibility. The level of implementation of actions was categorised into two groups (agenda setting/formulation vs. implementation/evaluation). Mean scores were generated for prioritisation of DDAs and infrastructure support. Deductive qualitative analysis was undertaken to identify barriers that influence policy implementation. Only 5/27 DDA indicators were reported as fully implemented by all national experts (international code that regulates the marketing of breastmilk substitutes, iron supplementation for IYC, micronutrient powders in IYC, iron/folic acid supplementation in pregnant women, paid maternity leave). Only 1/20 infrastructure support indicator (access to nutrition information) was rated as fully implemented by all experts. Barriers to implementing DDAs and infrastructure support included: legal feasibility or lack of regulations, inadequate monitoring/evaluation to ensure enforcement, commercial influences on policymakers, insufficient resources, shifting public health priorities with the COVID-19 pandemic and political instability. The experts prioritised 12 indicators across all five DDAs and eight infrastructure support indicators. Experts highlighted the need to improve implementation of all DDAs and identified ways to strengthen the enabling policy environment.
秘鲁婴幼儿(IYC)中存在多种形式的营养不良。世界卫生组织提出了双重行动(DDAs),以同时解决营养不足和超重/肥胖问题。我们评估了秘鲁政府层面针对 IYC 多种形式营养不良的现行行动及其优先事项。针对五项双重行动(纯母乳喂养、补充喂养、食品营销、孕产妇营养、学前营养;由 27 项指标评估)和有利于政策实施的环境(即“全健康政策”、互动平台、融资、监测、治理、领导力;由 20 项指标评估),对当前政策活动进行了映射。对 16 名国家专家进行了访谈,探讨了他们对双重行动和基础设施支持实施水平以及实施障碍的看法,以及根据可能的影响和可行性对其进行的优先排序。行动实施水平分为两组(议程设置/制定与实施/评估)。为双重行动和基础设施支持制定了优先顺序的平均分数。采用演绎定性分析来确定影响政策实施的障碍。只有 5/27 项双重行动指标被所有国家专家报告为全面实施(规范母乳代用品营销的国际法规、婴幼儿铁补充剂、婴幼儿微量营养素粉、孕妇铁/叶酸补充剂)。只有 1/20 项基础设施支持指标(获取营养信息)被所有专家评为全面实施。实施双重行动和基础设施支持的障碍包括:法律可行性或缺乏法规、监测/评估不足以确保执行、商业对政策制定者的影响、资源不足、新冠肺炎疫情和政治不稳定导致公共卫生重点转移。专家们对所有五个双重行动和八个基础设施支持指标进行了优先排序。专家们强调需要改善所有双重行动的实施,并确定了加强有利于政策实施的环境的方法。