1 / 17

SMART METHOD

SMART METHOD. STEPS FORWARD. FOUR BROAD STEPS. ADAPT “PAST” FIELD TEST EVALUATE AND REVISE DISSEMINATION STRATEGIES. Previous birth history (BAST ). Births to women in household in previous 5 years Current status for each child born in previous 5 years.

paley
Download Presentation

SMART METHOD

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SMART METHOD STEPS FORWARD

  2. FOUR BROAD STEPS • ADAPT “PAST” • FIELD TEST • EVALUATE AND REVISE • DISSEMINATION STRATEGIES

  3. Previous birth history(BAST) • Births to women in household in previous 5 years • Current status for each child born in previous 5 years

  4. Current household census method(CAST) • Age of each person living in HH on day of survey • No. of births and deaths (all ages) within HH during recall period • any adult respondent to enumerate current members

  5. Past household census method(PAST) • Age of all members of family living in HH in beginning of recall period • Current status of individuals • No. of births during recall period

  6. Basic Assumptions • Retrospective mortality estimates are commonly drawn from cross sectional surveys • Simple random sampling is best and most robust but may not always be possible • No comparative studies of different methods have been done to establish one method over another

  7. Common weaknesses • PAST and CAST allow CMR and age -specific rates to be calculated, BAST does not but it is shorter • PAST may be time consuming - importance of field training • No cause of death info. • In and out migration from household? • Importance of standard and validated questions

  8. Methodological points • Expected rates of malnutrition and mortality may vary in the same population • All households visited in mortality survey and only HH with 6 - 59m children for nutrition • Recall period: Apart from precision and PDAR concerns, recall period will depend on fast mortality has been changing • Simple random sampling is better than two stage cluster sampling

  9. FOUR BROAD STEPS • ADAPT “PAST” • FIELD TEST • EVALUATE AND REVISE • DISSEMINATION STRATEGIES

  10. Adapt PAST • Remove un-SMART fields, add food security questions and COD, migration, age/65 - 110) • Ensure a reasonable time limit for the entire interview • Adapt the standard (5 day) training package • Set up field interviewer instructions • Set up standard report generation

  11. FOUR BROAD STEPS • ADAPT “PAST” • FIELD TEST • EVALUATE AND REVISE • DISSEMINATION STRATEGIES

  12. FIELD TEST SMART METHOD • Essentials only (having it all takes time and money every time) • 2 or 3 countries to cover broad contexts; • Implementation schedule not to exceed 4 weeks (collection to public results)

  13. FOUR BROAD STEPS • ADAPT “PAST” • FIELD TEST • EVALUATE AND REVISE • DISSEMINATION STRATEGIES

  14. EVALUATE AND REVISE • Test method (ease of use, accuracy of results, speed of implementation…) • Test training package (transfer of knowledge, targeting audience • Test user satisfaction - to what extent is it responding to user needs • Release SMART Version 1.0

  15. FOUR BROAD STEPS • ADAPT “PAST” • FIELD TEST • EVALUATE AND REVISE • DISSEMINATION STRATEGIES

  16. Dissemination strategy • Strategy to promote use of method among field agencies-should want to use it, rather than obliged to use it • Strategy to promote use of results:Advocacy? Resource allocation? programming?

  17. Schematic Diagram of SMART Instrument SURVEY IDS FAMILY DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILE NUTRITION MORTALITY FOOD SECURITY

More Related