1. Programmatic adaptations to acute malnutrition screening and treatment during the COVID‐19 pandemic.
- Author
-
Wrabel, Maria, Stokes‐Walters, Ronald, King, Sarah, Funnell, Grace, and Stobaugh, Heather
- Subjects
MALNUTRITION diagnosis ,MALNUTRITION treatment ,CAREGIVERS ,HEALTH services accessibility ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,WORK ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL screening ,COMMUNITY health services ,MEDICAL care ,PATIENTS ,INTERVIEWING ,HELP-seeking behavior ,DIET therapy ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,QUALITATIVE research ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,RESEARCH funding ,SOUND recordings ,MEDICAL referrals ,MEDICAL appointments ,THEMATIC analysis ,DATA analysis software ,ACUTE diseases ,COVID-19 pandemic ,ARM circumference ,DISCHARGE planning ,DOSE-response relationship in biochemistry ,CHILDREN - Abstract
The COVID‐19 pandemic presented numerous challenges to acute malnutrition screening and treatment. To enable continued case identification and service delivery while minimising transmission risks, many organisations and governments implemented adaptations to community‐based management of acute malnutrition (CMAM) programmes for children under 5. These included: Family mid‐upper arm circumference (MUAC); modified admission and discharge criteria; modified dosage of therapeutic foods; and reduced frequency of follow‐up visits. This paper presents qualitative findings from a larger mixed methods study to document practitioners' operational experiences and lessons learned from these adaptations. Findings reflect insights from 37 interviews representing 15 organisations in 17 countries, conducted between July 2020 and January 2021. Overall, interviewees indicated that adaptations were mostly well‐accepted by staff, caregivers and communities. Family MUAC filled screening gaps linked to COVID‐19 disruptions; however, challenges included long‐term accuracy of caregiver measurements; implementing an intervention that could increase demand for inconsistent services; and limited guidance to monitor programme quality and impact. Modified admission and discharge criteria and modified dosage streamlined logistics and implementation with positive impacts on staff workload and caregiver understanding of the programme. Reduced frequency of visits enabled social distancing by minimising crowding at facilities and lessened caregivers' need to travel. Concerns remained about how adaptations impacted children's identification for and progress through treatment and programme outcomes. Most respondents anticipated reverting to standard protocols once transmission risks were mitigated. Further evidence, including multi‐year programmatic data analysis and rigorous research, is needed in diverse contexts to understand adaptations' impacts, including how to ensure equity and mitigate unintended consequences. Key messages: COVID‐19 CMAM programme adaptations enabled service continuity despite pandemic‐related challenges. Further evidence is needed on long‐term impacts.Family MUAC was well‐accepted and addressed screening gaps from COVID‐19 disruptions. Challenges included sustaining caregiver measurement accuracy; handling inaccurate self‐referrals to encourage health‐seeking behaviours; and limited programme design and monitoring guidance and tools.Modified admission criteria and therapeutic food dosage reduced contact between staff and children and streamlined logistics and implementation. Concerns remained about effects on programme admissions and outcomes.Reduced frequency of follow‐up visits successfully reduced facility crowding and need for caregiver travel. However, infrequent monitoring of childrenmay miss deterioration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF