尼日利亚农业推广服务的营养能力评估。

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q3 FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Food and Nutrition Bulletin Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1177/03795721231158417
Olutayo Adeyemi, Victor Adejoh, Olufolakemi Anjorin, Oluwaseun Ariyo, Babatunde Makanjuola, Mawuli Sablah, Adeyinka Onabolu
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引用次数: 3

摘要

背景:在尼日利亚和其他高负担国家实现有意义的营养不良减少需要通过营养敏感型农业和粮食系统持续改善饮食。然而,设计、规划、实施和监测这种营养敏感型系统的能力非常有限,包括在农业推广服务提供方面。了解实施营养变化所需行为体的现有能力对于有效的能力发展至关重要。目的:本研究评估了尼日利亚农业推广机构(AEAs)的营养能力及其所在组织和机构的能力。方法:本研究评估了31份推广培训材料,以纳入营养敏感型农业的建议。对23名推广人员进行了结构化访谈和焦点小组讨论,并对主要主题进行了编码和分析。结果:培训材料几乎没有包括营养目标和/或要提供的营养相关服务。正在提供一些与营养有关的服务,包括促进生物强化作物和营养密集的作物和动物、家庭园艺、食品安全和饮食多样化。然而,这些服务是有限的,而且服务交付是非结构化的、不统一的和不一致的。AEAs的数量相当不足,而可用的AEAs具有高工作负载,动机不佳,并且执行角色的资金、监督和后勤能力有限。人身安全也是服务提供的一个挑战。此外,在其他部门并不总是存在充分提供营养敏感型农业所必需的补充活动。结论:如果不解决有限的体制和组织能力缺陷,推广机构营养能力的广泛发展似乎不太可能实现与营养相关的变化。通俗易懂的标题:尼日利亚农业推广机构提供营养服务的能力。简明扼要:要减轻尼日利亚严重的营养不良负担,就需要增加营养丰富且不含有害物质的食物的供应和消费。为了生产这些食品,农民需要足够的营养和食品安全知识和技能。这类粮食的生产还需要以其他方式支持营养,包括增强妇女权能。推广人员传统上支持农民采用新的粮食生产和/或加工方法,以提高粮食产量。如果这些人员具备必要的知识和技能,也可以用来提供解决营养问题的服务。本研究评估了尼日利亚农业推广机构提供营养服务的能力,以确定如何提高其提供这些服务的能力。这项研究的结果是,推广人员没有足够的知识和技能来提供营养服务,他们的组织和他们工作的更广泛背景没有能力使他们有效地提供营养服务。例如,这些组织没有足够数量的工作人员,也没有为现有工作人员提供足够的交通工具去拜访农民。不安全感很高,因此推广人员无法经常访问农民,因为他们的生命可能受到威胁。该研究的结论是,有效地利用推广人员提供营养服务不仅需要培训推广人员,还需要提高组织能力和环境因素。
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Nutrition Capacity Assessment of Agriculture Extension Services in Nigeria.

Background: Achieving meaningful malnutrition reductions in Nigeria and other high-burden countries requires sustained improvements in diets, mediated through nutrition-sensitive agriculture and food systems. Yet, the capacity to design, plan, implement, and monitor such nutrition-sensitive systems is very limited, including within agricultural extension services delivery. Understanding existing capacity of actors required to implement nutrition change is crucial for effective capacity development.

Objective: This study assessed the nutrition capacity of agriculture extension agents (AEAs) in Nigeria and the capacity of their organizations and the institutions within which they operate.

Methods: The study assessed 31 extension training materials for inclusion of recommendations for nutrition-sensitive agriculture. Structured interviews and focus group discussions were conducted with 23 extension agents and were coded and analyzed for major themes.

Results: Training materials hardly included nutrition objectives and or nutrition-related services to be delivered. Some nutrition-related services were being delivered, including promotion of biofortified crops and nutrient-dense crops and animals, home gardening, food safety, and dietary diversification. However, these services were limited, and service delivery was unstructured, nonuniform, and inconsistent. Numbers of AEAs are quite inadequate while available AEAs had high workloads, are poorly motivated, and had limited funding, supervision, and logistics capacity to perform roles. Physical security was also a challenge for service delivery. Further, complementary activities in other sectors that were necessary for adequate delivery of nutrition-sensitive agriculture did not always exist.

Conclusion: Extensive development of nutrition capacities of extension agents appears unlikely to achieve nutrition-related changes if limiting institutional and organizational capacity deficits are not addressed.

Plain language title: Capacity of Agriculture Extension Agents in Nigeria to Deliver Nutrition Services.

Plain language summary: Reducing the significant burden of malnutrition in Nigeria requires increased availability and consumption of foods that are nutritious and free from harmful substances. To produce such foods, farmers need adequate nutrition and food safety knowledge and skills. The production of such food will also need to support nutrition in other ways, including increased women's empowerment. Extension agents traditionally support farmers to adopt new methods of food production and/or processing that support increased food yields. These agents can also be used to deliver services that will address nutrition if they have the necessary knowledge and skills. This study assessed the capacity of agriculture extension agents in Nigeria to deliver nutrition services, in order to determine how to increase their capacity to deliver these services. The results from the study are that the extension agents do not have sufficient knowledge and skills to deliver nutrition services, and that their organizations and the wider context in which they work do not have the capacity to enable them to deliver nutrition services effectively. For instance, the organizations do not have sufficient numbers of staff and do not provide current staff with adequate means of transportation to visit farmers. Insecurity is high and so extension agents are unable to visit farmers frequently because of the potential threats to their lives. The study concludes that effectively using extension agents to deliver nutrition services will require not just training of the extension agents but also improvements in organizational capacity and contextual factors.

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来源期刊
Food and Nutrition Bulletin
Food and Nutrition Bulletin 工程技术-食品科技
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
31
审稿时长
18-36 weeks
期刊介绍: The Food and Nutrition Bulletin (FNB,) is a peer-reviewed, academic journal published quarterly by the Nevin Scrimshaw International Nutrition Foundation. The Journal is one of the leading resources used by researchers, academics, nutrition policy makers and planners in over 125 countries to obtain the most current research and policy information related to nutrition in developing countries.
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