Overview of the infant and young child feeding policy environment in Pakistan: Federal, Sindh and Punjab context

Abstract Background Appropriate infant and young child feeding (IYCF) practices have been identified as important for appropriate child growth and development. (Ministry of Planning and Development, Ministry of National Health Services, Regulations and Coordination (2012)) Children in Pakistan still...

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Main Authors: Hana Mahmood, Yasmeen Suleman, Tabish Hazir, Durre Samin Akram, Shahadat Uddin, Michael J Dibley, Saleem Abassi, Amara Shakeel, Narjis Kazmi, Anne Marie Thow
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-06-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-017-4341-5
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spelling doaj-1d608cda9ead4bf0bfef3bb22dd1c7db2020-11-25T00:43:33ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582017-06-0117S2719110.1186/s12889-017-4341-5Overview of the infant and young child feeding policy environment in Pakistan: Federal, Sindh and Punjab contextHana Mahmood0Yasmeen Suleman1Tabish Hazir2Durre Samin Akram3Shahadat Uddin4Michael J Dibley5Saleem Abassi6Amara Shakeel7Narjis Kazmi8Anne Marie Thow9Maternal, Neonatal and Child Health Research Network (MNCHRN)/ International Research Force (IRF)Health, Education and Literacy Program (HELP)Maternal, Neonatal and Child Health Research Network(MNCHRN)Health, Education and Literacy Program (HELP)Complex Systems Research Group, The University of SydneySchool of Public Health, University of SydneyMaternal, Neonatal and Child Health Research Network(MNCHRN)Health, Education and Literacy Program (HELP)Maternal, Neonatal and Child Health Research Network(MNCHRN)Menzies Centre for Health Policy, School of Public Health, The University of SydneyAbstract Background Appropriate infant and young child feeding (IYCF) practices have been identified as important for appropriate child growth and development. (Ministry of Planning and Development, Ministry of National Health Services, Regulations and Coordination (2012)) Children in Pakistan still experience high rates of malnutrition, indicating a likely need for stronger IYCF policy. The purpose of this study was to identify major stakeholders who shape the IYCF policy environment and analyze which policies protect, promote and support IYCF practices, either directly or indirectly. Methods This study was conducted at the federal level, and in the provinces of Sindh and Punjab. We identified policies relevant to IYCF using a matrix developed by the South Asian Infant Feeding Research Network (SAIFRN), designed to capture policies at a range of levels (strategic policy documents through to implementation guidelines) in sectors relevant to IYCF. We analyzed the content using predetermined themes focused on support for mothers, and used narrative synthesis to present our findings. For the stakeholder analysis, we conducted four Net-Map activities with 49 interviewees using the Net-Map methodology. We analyzed the quantitative data using Organizational Risk Analyzer ORA and used the qualitative data to elucidate further information regarding relationships between stakeholders. Results We identified 19 policy documents for analysis. Eleven of these were nutrition and/or IYCF focused and eight were broader policies with IYCF as a component. The majority lacked detail relevant to implementation, particularly in terms of: ownership of the policies by a specific government body; sustainability of programs/strategies (most are donor funded), multi-sectoral collaboration; and effective advocacy and behavior change communication. Data collected through four Net-Map activities showed that after devolution of health ministry, provincial health departments were the key actors in the government whereas UNICEF and WHO were the key donors who were also highly influential and supportive of the objective. Conclusion This analysis identified opportunities to strengthen IYCF policy in Pakistan through increased clarity on roles and responsibilities, improved multisectoral collaboration, and strong and consistent training guidelines and schedules for community health workers. The current policy environment presents opportunities, despite limitations. Our Net-Map analysis indicated several key government and international stakeholders, who differed across Federal and Provincial study sites. The detailed information regarding stakeholder influence can be used to strengthen advocacy.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-017-4341-5MalnutritionPolicy analysisIYCF
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hana Mahmood
Yasmeen Suleman
Tabish Hazir
Durre Samin Akram
Shahadat Uddin
Michael J Dibley
Saleem Abassi
Amara Shakeel
Narjis Kazmi
Anne Marie Thow
spellingShingle Hana Mahmood
Yasmeen Suleman
Tabish Hazir
Durre Samin Akram
Shahadat Uddin
Michael J Dibley
Saleem Abassi
Amara Shakeel
Narjis Kazmi
Anne Marie Thow
Overview of the infant and young child feeding policy environment in Pakistan: Federal, Sindh and Punjab context
BMC Public Health
Malnutrition
Policy analysis
IYCF
author_facet Hana Mahmood
Yasmeen Suleman
Tabish Hazir
Durre Samin Akram
Shahadat Uddin
Michael J Dibley
Saleem Abassi
Amara Shakeel
Narjis Kazmi
Anne Marie Thow
author_sort Hana Mahmood
title Overview of the infant and young child feeding policy environment in Pakistan: Federal, Sindh and Punjab context
title_short Overview of the infant and young child feeding policy environment in Pakistan: Federal, Sindh and Punjab context
title_full Overview of the infant and young child feeding policy environment in Pakistan: Federal, Sindh and Punjab context
title_fullStr Overview of the infant and young child feeding policy environment in Pakistan: Federal, Sindh and Punjab context
title_full_unstemmed Overview of the infant and young child feeding policy environment in Pakistan: Federal, Sindh and Punjab context
title_sort overview of the infant and young child feeding policy environment in pakistan: federal, sindh and punjab context
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Abstract Background Appropriate infant and young child feeding (IYCF) practices have been identified as important for appropriate child growth and development. (Ministry of Planning and Development, Ministry of National Health Services, Regulations and Coordination (2012)) Children in Pakistan still experience high rates of malnutrition, indicating a likely need for stronger IYCF policy. The purpose of this study was to identify major stakeholders who shape the IYCF policy environment and analyze which policies protect, promote and support IYCF practices, either directly or indirectly. Methods This study was conducted at the federal level, and in the provinces of Sindh and Punjab. We identified policies relevant to IYCF using a matrix developed by the South Asian Infant Feeding Research Network (SAIFRN), designed to capture policies at a range of levels (strategic policy documents through to implementation guidelines) in sectors relevant to IYCF. We analyzed the content using predetermined themes focused on support for mothers, and used narrative synthesis to present our findings. For the stakeholder analysis, we conducted four Net-Map activities with 49 interviewees using the Net-Map methodology. We analyzed the quantitative data using Organizational Risk Analyzer ORA and used the qualitative data to elucidate further information regarding relationships between stakeholders. Results We identified 19 policy documents for analysis. Eleven of these were nutrition and/or IYCF focused and eight were broader policies with IYCF as a component. The majority lacked detail relevant to implementation, particularly in terms of: ownership of the policies by a specific government body; sustainability of programs/strategies (most are donor funded), multi-sectoral collaboration; and effective advocacy and behavior change communication. Data collected through four Net-Map activities showed that after devolution of health ministry, provincial health departments were the key actors in the government whereas UNICEF and WHO were the key donors who were also highly influential and supportive of the objective. Conclusion This analysis identified opportunities to strengthen IYCF policy in Pakistan through increased clarity on roles and responsibilities, improved multisectoral collaboration, and strong and consistent training guidelines and schedules for community health workers. The current policy environment presents opportunities, despite limitations. Our Net-Map analysis indicated several key government and international stakeholders, who differed across Federal and Provincial study sites. The detailed information regarding stakeholder influence can be used to strengthen advocacy.
topic Malnutrition
Policy analysis
IYCF
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-017-4341-5
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