RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Measuring the coverage of nutrition interventions along the continuum of care: time to act at scale JF BMJ Global Health JO BMJ Global Health FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd SP e001290 DO 10.1136/bmjgh-2018-001290 VO 4 IS Suppl 4 A1 Stuart Gillespie A1 Purnima Menon A1 Rebecca Heidkamp A1 Ellen Piwoz A1 Rahul Rawat A1 Melinda Munos A1 Robert Black A1 Chika Hayashi A1 Kuntal Kumar Saha A1 Jennifer Requejo YR 2019 UL http://gh.bmj.com/content/4/Suppl_4/e001290.abstract AB The global community is committed to addressing malnutrition. And yet, coverage data for high-impact interventions along the continuum of care remain scarce due to several measurement and data collection challenges. In this analysis paper, we identify 24 nutrition interventions that should be tracked by all countries, and determine if their coverage is currently measured by major household nutrition and health surveys. We then present three case studies, using published literature and empirical data from large-scale initiatives, to illustrate the kind of data collection innovations that are feasible. We find that data are not routinely collected in a standardised way across countries for most of the core set of interventions. Case studies—of growth monitoring and screening for acute malnutrition, infant and young child feeding counselling, and nutrition monitoring in India—highlight both challenges and potential solutions. Advancing the nutrition intervention coverage measurement agenda is essential for sustained progress in driving down rates of malnutrition. It will require (1) global consensus on a core set of validated coverage indicators on proven, high-impact nutrition-specific interventions; (2) the inclusion of coverage measurement and indicator guidance in WHO intervention recommendations; (3) the incorporation of these indicators into data collection mechanisms and relevant intervention delivery platforms; and (4) an agenda for continuous measurement improvement.