Understanding the performance of emergency feeding programmes: Save the Children’s CMAM Report

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Author(s)
Alice Obrecht
Publication language
English
Pages
35pp
Date published
07 Jan 2016
Publisher
ALNAP
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Innovation
Organisations
ALNAP

ALNAP and ELRHA will be looking at 15 different examples of humanitarian innovation funded by ELRHA’s Humanitarian Innovation Fund (HIF) grants. Each case study will explore the dynamics of successful innovation processes, culminating in a unique and in-depth study on innovation in humanitarian action.

Humanitarian agencies have widely used Emergency Supplementary Feeding Programmes (SFPs) to combat emergency levels of malnutrition. Yet SFPs have been found to be ineffective in several contexts, and there is a lack of quality data on whether or not they work at all.

Save the Children UK’s Community-based Management of Acute Malnutrition (CMAM) Report is a technology-based product innovation designed to facilitate more reliable reporting of data. The innovation is part of a broader paradigm aimed at changing how humanitarian actors measure the performance of acute malnutrition programming.

 

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