Indicator Definition
| Indicator Name | HUM 002 Percentage of affected people who state that the assistance, services and/or protection provided correspond with their needs |
|---|---|
| Indicator Definition | Basic needs (as defined in the CaLP Glossary): “The concept of basic needs refers to the essential goods, utilities, services, or resources required on a regular or seasonal basis by households to ensure long-term survival and minimum living standards, without resorting to negative coping mechanisms or compromising their health, dignity, and essential livelihood assets.” |
| Indicator Level | Outcome |
Disaggregation
| Disaggregation |
|
|---|---|
| Measuring Unit | Individuals in emergencies. Only direct beneficiaries are included in this indicator. If assistance is provided to a household, count all household members. If the exact number is unknown, use the average household size in the area as an approximation. |
Kobo Questionnaires
Examples of Actvities
Distribution of food or non-food items (NFIs)
Provision of emergency shelter
Implementation of cash transfer programs (multi-purpose cash, cash-for-work)
Emergency WASH solutions
Data Collection
| Data Source and Means of Verification | Survey (in most cases a post-distribution monitoring PDM) with a representative sample of primary stakeholders. |
|---|---|
| Measuring Frecuency | PDM: Shortly after the transfer/distribution or access to services. |
| Data Collection Guidance | Conduct a survey (e.g., post distribution monitoring (PDM) survey) shortly after the last final transfer/distribution. Include the questionnaire above (to your other questions you might want to ask). Follow-up Questions: (Not reported but recommended for program insight)
Important Note: Do not explicitly reference the provided assistance when asking these questions, and avoid rigid definitions of “basic needs.” Enumerators may offer examples (e.g., food, water, shelter) if necessary. |
How to report
Count the number of persons which benefit from the assistance at household level that have responded that they were able to meet their basic needs to the extent of "most" or "all".
The number should be disaggregated by age and gender. If you know the number of assisted households but not the real number of household members (number, gender, and age) you need to estimate by the typical ratio in your area.
To analyse whether the intervention is improving the ability to meet basic needs, it’s important to track all response categories (all, most, half, some, none), not just those reporting they meet all their needs. This approach highlights any gaps and areas where improvements aren’t occurring.
Calculate the percentage of people in each category by dividing the number of respondents per category by the total respondents. For example, if 100 respondents include 30 who answered "all" and 25 who answered "most," then 30% meet all their needs, and 25% meet most.
Extrapolate the number.
Related Indicators
| Related Donor Indicators | CALP: Percentage of households who report being able to meet their basic needs, as they define and prioritize them. USAID: M02: Percent of (beneficiary) households who report being able to meet their basic needs as they define and prioritize them |
|---|---|
| Related HELVETAS Indicators |