Report

Evidence Report 1

Using Mobile Phones for Nutrition Surveillance: A Review of Evidence

Published on 25 April 2024

Nutrition surveillance – or the systematic and periodic collection of information on nutrition – is vital to the capacity of governments and other agencies to track their progress towards reducing undernutrition, to promoting the accountability of their actions and to improving their ability to respond promptly to rapid changes in nutrition status brought about by food price volatility and other shocks.

However, nutrition surveillance is expensive and logistically laborious and therefore often non-existent in resource-low countries. Surveillance systems are also constrained by time-consuming and error-prone paper-based data collection followed by manual data entry. Consequently, monitoring of nutrition outcomes in real time and timely response to nutritional crises is often impossible.

Mobile phone technologies could help to address many of these challenges and offers potential benefits such as:

  1. lower costs of data collection and transfer;
  2. faster data transmission, analysis and dissemination;
  3. improved data quality;
  4. more transparent and inclusive data collection processes with the possibility of immediate feedback to households and communities.

Download the summary version

ER1 brief – Using Mobile Phones for Nutrition Surveillance

Cite this publication

Barnett, I. & Gallegos, J.V. (2013) Using Mobile Phones for Nutrition Surveillance: A Review of Evidence, Reducing Hunger and Undernutrition Evidence Report no. 1, Brighton: IDS.

Authors

Inka Barnett

Health and Nutrition Cluster Lead

Research Officer

Publication details

published by
IDS
authors
Barnett, I. and Gallegos, J.
journal
IDS Evidence Report, issue 1
language
English

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