| Literature DB >> 25318980 |
Kissa B M Kulwa1, Roosmarijn Verstraeten, Kimberley P Bouckaert, Peter S Mamiro, Patrick W Kolsteren, Carl Lachat.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Strategies to improve infant and young child nutrition in low- and middle- income countries need to be implemented at scale. We contextualised and packaged successful strategies into a feasible intervention for implementation in rural Tanzania. Opportunities that can optimise delivery of the intervention and encourage behaviour change include mothers willingness to modifying practices; support of family members; seasonal availability and accessibility of foods; established set-up of village peers and functioning health system. The primary objective of the study is to evaluate the effectiveness of a nutrition education package in improving feeding practices, dietary adequacy and growth as compared to routine health education. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25318980 PMCID: PMC4216379 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-1077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Trial profile.
Education and counselling sessions for mothers when children attain different ages
| Session 1 | Session 2 | Session 3 |
|---|---|---|
| Child 6 months-old | Child 9 months-old | Child 12 months-old |
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| Feedback and review of previously set goals | Feedback and review of previously set goals |
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| Breastfeeding your baby | Breastfeeding your baby | Breastfeeding your baby |
| Feeding your baby from 6 to 8 months (diversity, frequency, consistency, amount, responsive style) | Feeding your baby from 9 to 11 months (diversity, frequency, consistency, amount, responsive style) | Feeding your baby from 12 to 23 months (diversity, frequency, consistency, amount, responsive style) |
| Locally available foods for preparation of nutritious meals | Locally available foods for preparation of nutritious meals | Locally available foods for preparation of nutritious meals |
| Feeding your baby during and after illness | Feeding your baby during and after illness | Feeding your baby during and after illness |
| Hygiene (safety, handling & storage of food) and Home environment sanitation | Hygiene (safety, handling & storage of food) and Home environment sanitation | Hygiene (safety, handling & storage of food) and Home environment sanitation |
| Health care-seeking and Disease prevention | Health care-seeking and Disease prevention | Health care-seeking and Disease prevention |
| Utilisation of child health services and compliance to treatment and advice | Utilisation of child health services and compliance to treatment and advice | Utilisation of child health services and compliance to treatment and advice |
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Key recommendations and messages for promoting optimal feeding and health practices
| 1 | Continue to breastfeed your child on demand, during the day and night throughout the first and second years. Breastfeed first before giving other meals. |
| 2 | Start giving soft and thick meals in addition to breast milk when child completes 6 months, then continue with mashed and semi-solid meals. Increase variety, amount and consistency of food as he/she becomes used to eating and chewing different foods. |
| 3 | Prepare a thick porridge made from a combination of cereal flours. Enrich the porridge by adding groundnuts, milk, egg or legume. Thin porridge does not contain adequate nutrients to support your baby to grow well and stay healthy. |
| 4 | Give undiluted cow’s milk to your child at least 3 times per week. |
| 5 | Cook, mash, and add one or more ingredients from legumes (e.g. beans, pigeon peas, bambara groundnuts, cowpeas) in each meal. |
| 6 | Cook, mash and feed animal source foods (e.g. eggs, beef, pork, chicken, liver, fish, sardines) at least 3 times per week. |
| 7 | Cook, mash, and feed vegetables (e.g. leafy vegetables, pumpkin, avocado) in each meal. |
| 8 | Feed your child a fruit (e.g. pawpaw, ripe banana, mango, orange) after a meal at least once per day. |
| 9 | Increase frequency of feeding meals per day (2–3 times at 6–8 months, 3–4 times at 9–11 months, 3–4 times at 12–23 months). Feed 1–2 snacks (e.g. fruit, bread with groundnut paste) between two major meals. |
| 10 | Encourage your child to eat with patience and love. Encourage a sick child to drink and eat more frequently during illness. Provide extra food after illness to facilitate quick recovery. |
| 11 | Wash your hands with soap before preparing meals or before feeding children. Wash your hands with soap after visiting the toilet, and after cleaning a child who has defaecated. |
| 12 | Learn to recognise early danger signs and symptoms of childhood diseases. Promptly take a sick child to the nearest health facility for examination and treatment. |
| 13 | Ensure that your child completes a full course of prescribed medications. Return for a follow-up visit at the health facility when required or if child’s condition is not improving. |
| 14 | Keep your home environment clean. Use preventive measures to protect your child and family from diseases. |
Process evaluation objectives, data collection methods and indicators
| Objectives and data sources | Description of process indicators | Characteristic of process indicator |
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| Activity logs | Number of taught modules and sessions held with nutrition counsellors | Fidelity |
| Number of education and counselling sessions and taught lessons held with mothers | ||
| Number of reading resources distributed to targeted groups | ||
| Number of home visits conducted by nutrition counsellors | ||
| Number of sensitisation meetings held with family members | ||
| Number of sensitisation meetings held with health facility staff | ||
| Supervisory reports | Review of counsellors’ workbooks for completeness, validity of documented information, referrals, appointments kept or missed | Fidelity and dose delivered |
| Registration forms | Number of community-based nutrition counsellors trained | Fidelity |
| Number of health facility staff sensitised | ||
| Pre- and post-test scores | Performance of nutrition counsellors in knowledge and skills gained during training | Fidelity and dose delivered |
| Evaluation forms | Quality of training sessions (adequacy of delivery methods, time allocated to sessions, usefulness of materials and field practice, attitude to training) | |
| Structured observations | Nutrition counsellor’s skills during home visits on interpersonal skills, use of reading resources, problem-solving, confidence in counselling mothers | |
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| Activity logs | Number of recruited infants in intervention and control villages. Number dropped out. Reasons for dropping out | Reach (participation rate) |
| Attendance records | Number of mothers attending each education and counselling session (plus cooking demonstration) | |
| Number of family members represented in sensitisation meetings | ||
| Number of mothers visited/attended during home visits | ||
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| Attendance records | Number of mothers attending each education session | Dose received (exposure) |
| Number of mothers with information booklets | ||
| Structured observations | Observation of mothers’ attentiveness, interest/keen (e.g. asked/answered questions, give examples) during education and counselling sessions | |
| Observation of mothers’ feeding style (e.g. responsive feeding) during cooking demonstration sessions | ||
| Amount of meal consumed by infants at cooking demonstration sessions | ||
| Semi-structured interviews | Number of mothers who could recall (spontaneously and/or prompted) key behaviours learned in education sessions and home visits | |
| Number of mothers who could recall (spontaneously and/or prompted) messages contained in information booklet | ||
| Semi-structured interviews | Mothers’ perception on usefulness and preference (by ranking) of intervention aspects (education sessions, sensitisation meetings, home visits, booklet). | Dose received (satisfaction) |
| Mothers’ level of satisfaction with counsellors’ services | ||
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| Semi-structured interviews | Interviews with nutrition counsellors about any ongoing interventions (e.g. competing programmes), perception regarding intervention delivery, strengths, challenges, and suggestions for improvement | Context, facilitators, barriers, contamination |
| Interviews with village and sub-village leaders about village profile during baseline | ||
| Structured interviews | Interviews with residence in-charge of health centre on presence (and number) or absence of health staff who attended sensitisation meetings | |
| Structured observations | Observation of health facility staff conducting health education sessions at the facility in intervention and control villages | |
Schedule of intervention activities and measurements during the study period
| Activities and measurements | Child’s age (in months) and time points of data collection | |||||||||
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| 6 a | 7 | 8 | 9 b | 10 | 11 | 12 c | 13 | 14 | 15 d | |
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| Train community-based nutrition counsellors | X | X | ||||||||
| Education and counselling of mothers | X | X | X | |||||||
| Sensitisation meetings | X | X | ||||||||
| Home visits by counsellors | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
| Supervision of community-based nutrition counsellors | X | X | X | X | ||||||
| Monitoring | X | X | X | X | ||||||
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| Covariates | XI+C | |||||||||
| Child anthropometry | XI+C | XI | XI+C | XI+C | ||||||
| Child feeding practices (frequency, diversity) | XI+C | XI | XI+C | XI+C | ||||||
| Child food intake (24-hr recall) | XI+C | XI+C | ||||||||
| Child morbidity & healthcare-seeking | XI+C | XI | XI+C | XI | ||||||
| Child haemoglobin concentration | XI+C | XI+C | ||||||||
| Maternal recall and practice of feeding recommendations | XI | XI | XI | |||||||
| Process evaluation data | XI+C | XI+C | ||||||||
Baseline. Follow-up 1. Follow-up 2. End of intervention. XI+C Measurements taken in Intervention and Control groups; XI Measurements taken in Intervention group alone.