Scientists have developed a way to monitor food security using a
smartphone app, which combines weather and soil moisture data from
satellites with crowd-sourced data on the vulnerability of the
population to malnutrition and other relevant socio-economic data.
Drought
and crop failure can often be predicted by monitoring the weather and
measuring soil moisture. But other risk factors, such as socio-economic
problems or violent conflicts, can endanger food security too.
For
organisations such as Doctors without Borders (MSF), it is crucial to
obtain information about vulnerable regions as soon as possible, so that
they have a chance to provide help before it is too late.
The
system developed by scientists at Vienna University of Technology and
the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) in
Laxenburg, Austria, has yielded promising results during tests in the
Central African Republic.
"Today, smartphones are available even
in developing countries, and so we decided to develop an app, which we
called SATIDA COLLECT, to help us collect the necessary data," said
IIASA-based app developer Mathias Karner.
The digital
questionnaire of SATIDA COLLECT can be adapted to local eating habits,
as the answers and the GPS coordinates of every assessment are stored
locally on the phone.
When an internet connection is available,
the collected data are uploaded to a server and can be analysed along
with satellite-derived information about drought risk.
In the end a map could be created, highlighting areas where the danger of malnutrition is high.
For
Doctors without Borders, such maps are extremely valuable. They help to
plan future activities and provide help as soon as it is needed.
The study was published in the journal PLOS ONE.
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