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Comprehensive Food Security and Vulnerability Analysis and Nutrition Survey 2009

Rwanda, 2009
Reference ID
RWA_2009_CFSVA_v01_M
Producer(s)
National Institute of Statistics of Rwanda
Metadata
DDI/XML JSON
Study website
Created on
May 19, 2014
Last modified
Mar 29, 2019
Page views
58696
Downloads
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  • Study Description
  • Data Dictionary
  • Downloads
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  • Related Publications
  • Identification
  • Version
  • Scope
  • Coverage
  • Producers and sponsors
  • Sampling
  • Survey instrument
  • Data collection
  • Data processing
  • Data appraisal
  • Data Access
  • Disclaimer and copyrights
  • Contacts
  • Metadata production
  • Identification

    Survey ID number

    RWA_2009_CFSVA_v01_M

    Title

    Comprehensive Food Security and Vulnerability Analysis and Nutrition Survey 2009

    Country
    Name Country code
    Rwanda RWA
    Study type

    Comprehensive Food Security & Vulnerability Analysis [hh/cfsva]

    Series Information

    This baseline survey is a joint initiative and has been undertaken with the objective of analyzing trends over time in comparison with other more recent secondary data, measuring the extent and depth of food and nutrition insecurity and vulnerability, and identifying the underlying causes. It is the second time that this type of survey has been conducted in Rwanda, the previous one taking place in 2006. The 2009 CFSVANS has collected indicators on human and social capital, natural capital, physical capital, economic capital and livelihood strategies, food consumption , and health and nutrition, not included in the 2006 study. In addition, the CFSVANS has integrated a risk and vulnerability context module thus determining the most commonly experienced shocks by the sampled households at the district level.

    Abstract

    As significant progress continues to be made by the Rwandan economy following various recovery and growth strategies, certain elements remain crucial. The food and nutrition security of the population remains a key building block in not only consolidating the gains already made thus far but also further accelerating the rate of growth towards the realization of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The 2009 national Comprehensive Food Security and Vulnerability Analysis (CFSVA) and Nutrition survey was undertaken with the objective of analyzing trends over time in comparison with the 2006 CFSVA and the 2005 RDHS as well as with other more recent secondary data, measuring the extent and depth of food and nutrition insecurity and vulnerability, and identifying the underlying causes. The five key questions to a CFSVA and/or Nutrition Survey are: who are the people currently facing food insecurity and malnutrition; how many are they; where do they live; why are they food insecure and/or malnourished and; how can food assistance and other interventions make a difference in reducing poverty, hunger and supporting livelihoods? In order to provide answers to these questions, specifically, the assessment sought to:

    • Identify geographic and socio-economic groups that are food insecure or vulnerable to food insecurity;
    • Highlight the nature and causes of food insecurity among each group;
    • Identify the major risks and constraints to improving food security;
    • Evaluate assistance needs at the short, medium and long range;
    • Support the development of an appropriate targeting system;
    • Better define the role of GoR’s development partners including WFP in promoting food security strengthening programs;
    • Determine the prevalence of nutritional status of vulnerable groups (children aged 6 - 59 months and non-pregnant women of reproductive age (15-49 years old);
    • Determine the prevalence of exclusive breastfeeding as a key Infant and Young Child Feeding strategy;
    • Establish the linkage between household food security and nutritional status of children in Rwanda.
    Kind of Data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Unit of Analysis

    Community, household

    Version

    Version Description

    Version 2.1: Edited, anonymous dataset for public distribution.

    Version Notes

    The CFSVANS 2009 has collected indicators on health and nutrition not included in the 2006 study.

    Scope

    Notes

    The 2009 CFSVA & NS has collected indicators on human and social capital, natural capital, physical capital, economic capital and livelihood strategies, food consumption, and health and nutrition. In addition, the CFSVA & NS has integrated a risk and vulnerability context module thus determining the most commonly experienced shocks by the sampled households at the district level.

    Topics
    Topic Vocabulary
    Agriculture & Rural Development World Bank
    Food (production, crisis) World Bank
    Land (policy, resource management) World Bank
    Nutrition World Bank
    Keywords
    Food Nutrition Disaster Food vulnerability

    Coverage

    Geographic Coverage

    National coverage

    Geographic Unit

    Sub-provincial level

    Universe

    Households and individuals from households from the nationally sampled area

    Producers and sponsors

    Primary investigators
    Name Affiliation
    National Institute of Statistics of Rwanda Ministry of Economics Planification and Finance
    Producers
    Name Affiliation Role
    United Nations World Food Programme International Organisation Technical assistance
    Funding Agency/Sponsor
    Name Role
    World Food Programme Financial support
    United Nations’ Children Fund-Rwanda Financial support
    World Vision Rwanda Financial support
    ONE UN Fund Financial support
    Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (Gates) Financial support
    Other Identifications/Acknowledgments
    Name Affiliation
    Ministry of Agriculture and Animal resources Government of Rwanda
    Ministry of Health Government of Rwanda
    Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning Government of Rwanda
    Ministry of Local Government and Administration Government of Rwanda
    The Heads of the Households
    The WFP team in HQ and the Regional Bureau International Organisation

    Sampling

    Sampling Procedure

    Rwanda is administratively divided into four provinces (Northern Province, Southern Province, Eastern Province and Western Province) plus Kigali City and a total of 30 districts. Districts are further divided in sectors and cells. The 2009 CFSVA and Nutrition Survey was designed to provide statistically representative information at the sub-provincial level. To facilitate comparison with existing studies, it was decided to define strata using administrative limits rather than food economy zones (as in 2006). Because of the large number of districts, it was decided to define strata that would be either single districts or a group of districts. Districts that were identified as similar with regards to their socio-economic and agroenvironmental characteristics were grouped together. A total of 16 strata were defined including 8 districts and 8 groups of districts. Kigali City was not included in the sample.

    The Eastern Province includes the strata of Nyagatare-Gatsibo-Kayonza, Kirehe-Ngoma-Rwamagana, and Bugesera.
    The Northern Province includes the strata of Musanze-Burera, Gakenke, and Rulindo-Gicumbi.
    The Western Province includes the strata of Rubavu, Nyabihu, Ngororero, Rutsiro-Karongi, and Nyamasheke-Rusizi.
    The Southern Province includes the strata of Kamonyi-Muhanga-Ruhango, Nyanza, Huye, Gisagara, and Nyamagabe-Nyaruguru.
    Within each stratum, NISR implemented a two-stage sampling procedure to select households using an approach that is standardized for statistical studies in Rwanda. Zones de Dénombrement (ZD, enumeration areas) were selected first, followed by households using 2007 population estimates based on the 2002 census. The ZDs are a sampling unit that is smaller than a sector.

    A total of 450 ZD were selected. In each stratum, the probability of the ZDs to be selected was equal to the number of ZDs in the stratum divided by the number of ZDs. In each stratum, ZDs were randomly selected. Within each sampled ZD, a total of 12 households were interviewed, resulting in a total expected sample size of 5,400 households.

    All of the households were interviewed. Enumerators were provided with clear instructions on which households to interview, and how to find them. Supervisors were provided with a list of over-sampled households in the event that a household had to be replaced.

    Because this study also focuses on the relation between nutrition and food security, it was decided during the study design that only households with children aged below 5 years old would be included in the sample. This imposed some limitations in the ability to draw conclusions about all the households in Rwanda, as explained in the limitations section below. (See in CFSV&NS 2009 Report).

    Weighting

    Taking into consideration the sampling methodology summarized above, adjustment weights were computed to provide results representative at country level. The household probability of selection is equal to the product of a household’s probability of being selected in a ZD by the probability of the ZD of being sampled. The inverse of this probability is the design weight. The design weight is divided by the product of the total number of households in the population divided by the number of sampled households. The result is the normalized weights which were used in all analyses.

    Survey instrument

    Questionnaires

    Household survey
    To allow for comparison over time, the 2009 CFSVA and Nutrition Survey used a standard questionnaire similar to the one used for the 2006 CFSVA. In 2006, face validity of the questionnaire was examined by local and food security experts and the questionnaire was piloted among a random sample of people not included in the study. It was a structured questionnaire using mainly close-ended questions with response options provided to the enumerators. For several questions, respondents were allowed to provide more than one response.The survey instrument sought to collect quantitative data on 13 components: (1) demographics; (2) housing and facilities; (3) household and productive assets; (4) inputs to livelihoods; (5) migration and remittances; (6) sources of credit; (7) agricultural production; (8) expenditure; (9) food sources and consumption; (10) shocks and food security; (11) programme participation; (12) maternal health and nutrition; and (13) child health and nutrition.

    Community questionnaire
    In addition to the household survey, a community questionnaire was administered to a key informant, who was an official representative of the area, including the Executive Secretary of the Cell, or any individual responsible for administrative services at Cell level. The community questionnaire was developed using an approach similar to that of the household questionnaire. Questions were open-ended and the questionnaires covered four main aspects; migration and seasonal movement of population, health, external assistance (food aid), and market prices.

    The questionnaires were developed in English and administered in Kinyarwanda. Careful training was conducted to reduce individual variations on how enumerators interpreted the questionnaire and understood the questions.

    Data collection

    Dates of Data Collection
    Start End
    2009-02 2009-03
    Data Collectors
    Name Affiliation
    National Institute of Statistics of Rwanda MINECOFIN
    Supervision

    After the training, enumerators went to the field in teams of 5 individuals including a team leader. In addition there were 10 national supervisors.

    Data Collection Notes

    Data collection for the survey was conducted by the National Institute of Statistics of Rwanda (NISR) in partnership with World Food Programme, UNICEF, World Vision Rwanda, MINAGRI, MINECOFIN, MINALOC and MoH after the survey protocol had been cleared by the National Ethics Committee. A total of 150 enumerators participated in a 9 days-training prior to data collection. The purpose of the training was to familiarize the enumerators with the protocol and questionnaires used for the study and ensure that the study was conducted in a standardized manner. It covered instructions on how to select respondents, conduct interviews and take anthropometric measurements. The training included field testing and practice sessions. After the training, enumerators went to the field in teams of 5 individuals including a team leader. In addition there were 10 national supervisors.

    Data processing

    Data Editing

    Data entry was conducted by NISR using CSPro. The database was then exported to SPSS for analysis. Statistical analysis was conducted by WFP in Rwanda and Rome, with the support of NISR. SPSS and ADDAWIN were used to conduct PCA and cluster analysis. Z-scores for wasting, stunting and underweight were calculated using WHO Anthro. All other analyses were done using SPSS.

    Data appraisal

    Data Appraisal

    A series of data quality tables and graphs are available to review the quality of the data and include the following:

    • Food Items, Groups and Weights for Calculation of the FCS
    • Household characteristics associated with food consumption
    • Child nutrition by livelihood, wealth index and FCS
    • The people facing food insecurity and vulnerability
    • Sample and Demographic Characteristics by Strata (CFSVA 2009)

    Data Access

    Access authority
    Name Affiliation URL Email
    National Institute of Statistics of Rwanda MINECOFIN http://www.statistics.gov.rw info@statistics.gov.rw
    Citation requirements

    "National Institute of Statistics of Rwanda. Comprehensive Food Security and Vulnerability Analysis and Nutrition Survey 2009 (CFSVA 2009). v2.1, provided by the National Data Archive. http://microdata.statistics.gov.rw/index.php/catalog"

    Disclaimer and copyrights

    Disclaimer

    The user of the data acknowledges that the original collector of the data, the authorized distributor of the data, and the relevant funding agency bear no responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses.

    Contacts

    Contacts
    Name Affiliation Email URL
    Vulnerability Analysis and Mapping World Food Programme wfp.vaminfo@wfp.org http://www.wfp.org/food-security
    Director General National Institute of Statistics of Rwanda info@statistics.gov.rw http://www.statistics.gov.rw
    World Bank Microdata Library microdata@worldbank.org

    Metadata production

    DDI Document ID

    DDI_RWA_2009_CFSVA_v02_M

    Producers
    Name Affiliation Role
    National Institute of Statistics of Rwanda Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning Documentation of the study
    Accelerated Data Program International Household Survey Network Review of the metadata
    Date of Metadata Production

    2012-06-24

    Metadata version

    DDI Document version

    Version 02 (October 2013). Edited version based on Version 01 DDI that was done by National Institute of Statistics of Rwanda and reviewed by Accelerated Data Program, International Household Survey Network.

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