Article index
Issue 2 / June 2020
- Editorial (page 2)
- Leveraging the power of multiple systems to improve diets and feeding practices in early life in South Asia (page 4)
- Using an in-depth assessment of young children’s diets to develop a Multisectoral Nutrition Communications Strategy in Punjab province, Pakistan (page 6)
- The role of nutrition-sensitive agriculture in improving diets of young children: Homestead food production in Nepal (page 8)
- Addressing micronutrient gaps to reduce anaemia in Bhutan’s young children: Early experiences in home fortification (page 11)
- Translating the Home-Based Care for the Young Child initiative into action for young child feeding in Bihar, India (page 13)
- Scaling up a community-based nutrition package in Afghanistan to improve complementary feeding practices in children 6-23 months of age (page 16)
- Combining WASH and nutrition activities within a multisectoral package to improve young children’s diets and reduce child stunting in Sindh province, Pakistan (page 19)
- Improving social protection programmes to support mothers and young children’s diets in Bangladesh: Combining cash transfers with behaviour change (page 22)
- Addressing inequities in nutrition outcomes in Nepal: Integrating an unconditional child cash grant and infant and young child feeding programme (page 25)
- Integrating complementary food supplements at scale into national nutrition programmes: Insights from India (page 27)
- The double burden of malnutrition among young children in South Asia: Policy and programme options (page 29)
- Resources (page 31)
Issue 1 / June 2019
- NEX South Asia Editorial (page 2)
- Unlocking the power of maternal nutrition to improve nutritional care of women in South Asia (page 4)
- Harnessing the potential of India’s medical colleges to bring maternal nutrition services to scale (page 6)
- Addressing maternal nutrition service delivery gaps in Afghanistan: Policy and programming opportunities (page 9)
- Creating an enabling environment for delivering maternal nutrition interventions in Bhutan (page 12)
- Nepal’s success story: What helped to improve maternal anaemia? (page 14)
- Delivering care to address a double burden of maternal malnutrition in Sri Lanka (page 17)
- Combining a mid-day meal, health service package and peer support in Karnataka State, India (page 20)
- Providing maternal nutrition services at sub-national level in Punjab Province, Pakistan (page 23)
- Integration of maternal nutrition into Nepal’s health service platforms: What’s happening? (page 26)
- Strengthening nutrition information systems to improve maternal nutrition in Bangladesh (page 29)
- Resources (page 31)