Evidence for an enhanced HIV/AIDS policy and care in Cameroon: proceedings of the second Cameroon HIV Research Forum (CAM-HERO) 2021

Patrice Tchendjou ; Peter Vanes Ebasone ; Anastase Dzudie ; Eveline Mboh Khan ; Joseph Fokam ; Pius Tih Muffih ; Alexis Ndjolo ; Leonard Bonono Nyoto ; Charles Kouanfack ; Gabriel Mabou ; +34 more... Tatiana Djikeussi ; Colette Sih ORCID logo ; Jerome Ateudjieu ; Boris Tchounga ; Boris Youngui Tchakounte ; Simplice Lekeumo ; Felicite Naah Tabala ; Benjamin Atanga ; Leonie Simo ; Madeleine Bakari ; Armel Zemsi ; Emile Shu Nforbih ; Gilles Ndayisaba ; Saint Just Petnga ; Julie Laure Nguemo ; Marc Lionel Ngamani ; Phyllis Fon ; Judith Nasah ; Esther Neba ; George Njie ; Nicoline Ndiforwah ; Ezekiel Ngoufack Semengue ; Tshimwanga Katayi ; Gilbert Tene ; Pascal Atanga Nji ; Emmanuelle Njankou ; Nyenty Agbornkwai ; Appolinaire Thiam ; John Ditekemena ; Clement Ndongmo ; Therese Abong Bwemba ; Serge Clotaire Billong ; Anne Cecile Zoung-Kany Bisseck ; Louis Richard Njock ; (2022) Evidence for an enhanced HIV/AIDS policy and care in Cameroon: proceedings of the second Cameroon HIV Research Forum (CAM-HERO) 2021. Pan African Medical Journal, 43. DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2022.43.92.37080
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To achieve the Sustainable Development Goal of zero hunger, multi-sectoral strategies to improve nutrition are necessary. Building towards this goal, the food and agriculture sector must be considered when designing nutritional interventions. Nevertheless, most frameworks designed to guide nutritional interventions do not adequately capture opportunities for integrating nutrition interventions within the food and agriculture sector. This paper aims to highlight how deeply connected the food and agriculture sector is to underlying causes of malnutrition and identify opportunities to better integrate the food and agriculture sector and nutrition in low and middle income countries. In particular, this paper: (1) expands on the UNICEF conceptual framework for undernutrition to integrate the food and agriculture sector and nutrition outcomes, (2) identifies how nutritional outcomes and agriculture are linked in six important ways by defining evidence-based food and agriculture system components within these pathways: as a source of food, as a source of income, through food prices, women’s empowerment, women’s utilization of time, and women’s health and nutritional status, and (3) shows that the food and agriculture sector facilitates interventions through production, processing and consumption, as well as through farmer practices and behavior. Current frameworks used to guide nutrition interventions are designed from a health sector paradigm, leaving agricultural aspects not sufficiently leveraged. This paper concludes by proposing intervention opportunities to rectify the missed opportunities generated by this approach. Program design should consider the ways that the food and agriculture sector is linked to other critical sectors to comprehensively address malnutrition. This framework is designed to help the user to begin to identify intervention sites that may be considered when planning and implementing multi-sectoral nutrition programs


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