Indicator’s Wording
Indicator’s Purpose
How to Collect and Analyse the Required Data
1) According to the Global Nutrition Cluster, "Average Daily Weight Gain is calculated on a randomized sample of cured discharges for kwashiorkor and marasmus. A reasonable randomized sample of discharged cured cases is 20. If lower numbers have been discharged as cured during the period of reporting, take all discharged cured."
2) For every cured child in your sample, calculate the child's discharge weight (in kg) minus the minimum weight ever recorded during the treatment period. Multiply it by 1,000 to convert the weight gain to grams.
3) Divide the result by the minimum recorded weight (in kg) to get the grams of weight gained per kilo body weight.
4) Divide the result by the number of days elapsed between the discharge from the program and the date the minimum recorded weight was recorded.
5) Subsequently, the average weight gain can be calculated as the sum of individual weight gains (gram/kg/day) divided by the total number of children.
Disaggregate by
Disaggregate the data by geographical area, gender and age groups.
Important Comments
1) The indicator does not require any separate survey – all data can be gained from the treatment program’s regular records.
2) To save time, you can set up a simple program in Excel that calculates the average weight gain.
3) The rate of average weight gain in OTP programmes is frequently around 8g/kg/day. Considerably lower weight gain might indicate the program’s limited quality. It also significantly increases its costs (due to higher consumption of Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Food and higher staff time requirements). The thresholds for average weight gain recommended by the Global Nutrition Cluster are <5 g/kg/d: poor, 5-10 g/kg/d: moderate and >10 g/kg/d: good.