Nutritional Postharvest Loss Estimation Methodology for Humanitarian Aid (NUTRI+4AID). Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO). Innovative Methods and Metrics for Agriculture and Nutrition Action (IMMANA) (PI) Total £250,000. 2 years. (2023-24 – subjected to no-cost extension). Partners: University of Zimbabwe, International Potato Center (Uganda), Mood Technologies. Rationale: No methodological tool exists to measure nutrient loss along food aid food systems. Aims: Develop a prediction tool and methodology to estimate nutritional postharvest losses on humanitarian value chains.
Strengthening African Food Systems in the face of climate change and Food insecurity. (SAFFODS) EU-ERANET-funded. (PI of the NRI component - £131,000) 4 years (2021-25). Partners: CIRAD (France), ISRA BAME (Senegal), UNA (Ivory Coast). Rationale: African food systems need to be made more resilient. Aims: to strengthen food systems for fruits & vegetables in Senegal and Ivory Coast in the face of climate change and food insecurity. Results: we have collected data on nutrient changes in mango value chain in Ivory Coast.
OMICS and bioinformatics applied to plant alternative protein formulations to decipher malnutrition (Call 1) & Strengthening food systems in plant-alternative proteins to address infant malnutrition in Africa (Call 2) Universities UK International (UUKi) UK-Israel Mobility Exchange (PI). Call 1: £70,400. 10 months. (2023-24). Call 2 :£92,950. 10 months (2024-25). Partner: HUJI. Collaborators: Peter Akomo international consultant, Anastasios Tsaousis, University of Kent.
Rationale: Acute child malnutrition is a major public health issue i.e. in poor settings in LMICs. We are looking at ways to address it in a sustainable manner by building a sustainable food system and better understanding the mechanisms of malnutrition and its recovery using high-level research tools. Aim: Develop local plant based alternative RUTFs more sustainable for LMICs and understand better the underlying mechanisms of malnutrition, links between diet, growth and bone development, and microbiome. Results: Building on a Innovate UK-KTN- GCRF AgriFood Africa Innovation Awards Round 2, this initiative is used to spearhead a Medical Research Council research proposal submitted in February 2024 and could lead to a scientific breakthrough giving critical insights on how diet could be modulated to optimise microbiome and gut development and address infant malnutrition.
Postgraduate student: MPhil/PhD Laura Utume supervised by Aurelie Bechoff, Dina Nikolaou and Andrew Westby. “Development of ‘safe for the gut’ ready-to-use-therapeutic-food (RUTF) to tackle malnutrition”
Assessing the designs of nutrition interventions to better understand the persistence of malnutrition in the Sahel EU. Nutrition Research Facility (through Agrinatura. (technical expert). 1 year (2023-24)
Rationale: Despite continued investments to improve food and nutrition security in the Sahel, there are high rates of malnutrition (stunting, wasting, and anaemia). Aim: The project examines how better designs of nutritional interventions could lead to improved nutrition and food security. Results: A scoping review and Key-informants interviews have been conducted bringing coherent insights about proposed design improvements.