Evidence-informed decision making for nutrition: African experiences and way forward
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Abstract
Although substantial amount of nutrition research is conducted in Africa, the research
agenda is mainly donor-driven. There is a clear need for a revised research agenda in
Africa which is both driven by and responding to local priorities. The present paper summarises
proceedings of a symposium on how evidence can guide decision makers towards
context-appropriate priorities and decisions in nutrition. The paper focuses on lessons learnt
from case studies by the Evidence Informed Decision Making in Nutrition and Health
Network implemented between 2015 and 2016 in Benin, Ghana and South Africa. Activities
within these countries were organised around problem-oriented evidence-informed
decision-making (EIDM), capacity strengthening and leadership and horizontal collaboration.
Using a combination of desk-reviews, stakeholder influence-mapping, semi-structured
interviews and convening platforms, these country-level studies demonstrated strong interest
for partnership between researchers and decision makers, and use of research evidence for
prioritisation and decision making in nutrition. Identified capacity gaps were addressed
through training workshops on EIDM, systematic reviews, cost–benefit evaluations and evidence
contextualisation. Investing in knowledge partnerships and development of capacity
and leadership are key to drive appropriate use of evidence in nutrition policy and programming
in Africa.
