| Literature DB >> 27695118 |
Magali Leyvraz1, James P Wirth2, Bradley A Woodruff2, Rajan Sankar3, Prahlad R Sodani4, Narottam D Sharma4, Grant J Aaron1.
Abstract
The Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) in the State of Telangana, India, freely provides a fortified complementary food product, Bal Amrutham, as a take-home ration to children 6-35 months of age. In order to understand the potential for impact of any intervention, it is essential to assess coverage and utilization of the program and to address the barriers to its coverage and utilization. A two-stage, stratified cross-sectional cluster survey was conducted to estimate the coverage and utilization of Bal Amrutham and to identify their barriers and drivers. In randomly selected catchment areas of ICDS centers, children under 36 months of age were randomly selected. A questionnaire, constructed from different validated and standard modules and designed to collect coverage data on nutrition programs, was administered to caregivers. A total of 1,077 children were enrolled in the survey. The coverage of the fortified take-home ration was found to be high among the target population. Nearly all caregivers (93.7%) had heard of Bal Amrutham and 86.8% had already received the product for the target child. Among the children surveyed, 57.2% consumed the product regularly. The ICDS program's services were not found to be a barrier to product coverage. In fact, the ICDS program was found to be widely available, accessible, accepted, and utilized by the population in both urban and rural catchment areas, as well as among poor and non-poor households. However, two barriers to optimal coverage were found: the irregular supply of the product to the beneficiaries and the intra-household sharing of the product. Although sharing was common, the product was estimated to provide the target children with significant proportions of the daily requirements of macro- and micronutrients. Bal Amrutham is widely available, accepted, and consumed among the target population in the catchment areas of ICDS centers. The coverage of the product could be further increased by improving the supply chain.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27695118 PMCID: PMC5047467 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0160814
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Macro- and Micronutrient Composition of Bal Amrutham.
| Component | Amount per 100 grams |
|---|---|
| Energy (kcal) | 414 |
| Protein (g) | 11 |
| Fat (g) | 11 |
| Iron (mg) | 9.1 |
| Vitamin A (μg) | 202.5 |
| Calcium (mg) | 367 |
| Vitamin B1 (mg) | 0.6 |
| Vitamin B2 (mg) | 0.55 |
| Vitamin C (mg) | 15.3 |
| Folic acid (μg) | 22.1 |
| Niacin (mg) | 6.3 |
Survey Population Demographics and Household Characteristics.
| Variable | N | Values |
|---|---|---|
| Household size (mean) | 1,077 | 5.0 (4.9, 5.1) |
| Household dependency ratio (mean) | 1,077 | 0.87 (0.80, 0.97) |
| Poor households (%) | 1,039 | 23.2 (17.6, 29.9) |
| Electricity (%) | 1,039 | 97.6 (95.0, 98.9) |
| Clean cooking fuel (%) | 1,039 | 47.5 (41.1, 54.1) |
| Improved flooring (%) | 1,039 | 82.0 (76.8, 86.2) |
| Safe drinking water source (%) | 1,039 | 95.8 (91.6, 98.0) |
| Adequate toilet sanitation (%) | 1,039 | 34.6 (28.6, 41.1) |
| One or more household members 5–14 years not currently attending school (%) | 1,039 | 6.0 (3.7, 9.3) |
| Food insecure (%) | 1,039 | 2.8 (1.7, 4.6) |
| Age (mean years) | 1,077 | 25.3 (24.5, 26.1) |
| ≥ 5 years of schooling (%) | 1,039 | 60.7 (52.6, 68.2) |
| Women with low MUAC | 1,039 | 34.4 (29.5, 39.7) |
| Age (mean months) | 1,077 | 16.9 (16.1, 17.9) |
| Sex, female (%) | 1,077 | 50.4 (45.3, 55.4) |
| Children with low MUAC | 1,039 | 8.3 (6.4, 10.8) |
a All values are mean (95% CI) or percentage (95% CI), as indicated.
b Low MUAC is defined as MUAC below 230 mm
c Low MUAC is defined as below 115 mm for children <6 months and below 125 mm for children 6–36 months. Missing values were imputed with age-group median MUAC
Infant and Child Feeding Index Indicators.
| Variable | N | All | Poor | Non-poor | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ICFI score of children 6–35 months (mean) | 903 | 4.82 (4.68, 4.95) | 4.91 (4.71, 5.10) | 4.78 (4.62, 4.95) | 0.287 |
| Children 6–35 months with optimal IYCF practices (%) | 869 | 29.2 (24.4, 34.5) | 29.5 (20.9, 39.8) | 29.1 (24.0, 34.8) | 0.942 |
| Children 0–35 months with optimal IYCF practices (%) | 1,039 | 38.7 (33.5, 44.1) | 38.2 (28.9, 48.4) | 38.8 (33.7, 44.3) | 0.896 |
| Children 6–23 months with continued breastfeeding (%) | 571 | 82.7 (76.7, 87.4) | 82.3 (65.8, 91.9) | 82.8 (77.7, 87.0) | 0.936 |
| Children under 6 months exclusively breastfed (%) | 170 | 89.1 (80.9, 94.0) | 96.2 (80.2, 99.4) | 87.4 (77.6, 93.3) | 0.165 |
| Children 6–35 months with age-appropriate dietary diversity (%) | 869 | 47.3 (42.2, 52.5) | 44.4 (34.7, 54.5) | 48.2 (42.3, 54.1) | 0.523 |
| Children 6–35 months with age-appropriate meal frequency (%) | 869 | 66.7 (61.8, 71.2) | 70.6 (62.2, 77.8) | 65.5 (59.7, 70.8) | 0.295 |
a All values are means (95% CI) or percentage (95% CI), as indicated.
b MPI score ≥ .33 is considered “poor.”
c “Optimal IYCF practices,” based on continued breastfeeding, increased dietary diversity, and increased meal frequency based on child’s age range, is defined as ICFI = 6.
Fig 1Bal Amrutham Coverage Indicators among Children 6–35 Months (N = 905).
Percent Met Need and Coverage Ratios of Bal Amrutham.
| Type of coverage | Risk group | Met need (%) | Coverage ratio (mean) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Message coverage | Poverty | 91.3 (80.4, 99.2) | 0.94 (0.83, 1.01) |
| Poor IYCF | 95.4 (92.2, 97.9) | 0.98 (0.95, 1.02) | |
| Contact coverage | Poverty | 85.5 (72.5, 95.3) | 0.96 (0.82, 1.06) |
| Poor IYCF | 88.5 (82.8, 93.5) | 0.99 (0.92, 1.07) | |
| Any coverage | Poverty | 63.4 (47.9, 77.3) | 0.90 (0.69, 1.11) |
| Poor IYCF | 67.4 (60.4, 74.3) | 0.92 (0.82, 1.05) | |
| Effective coverage | Poverty | 52.4 (40.9, 64.6) | 0.91 (0.71, 1.14) |
| Poor IYCF | 55.9 (49.0, 61.9) | 0.95 (0.79, 1.14) |
a Results are presented for all children 6–35 months of age (N = 905) and are mean (95% CI) or percentage (95% CI), as indicated.
b Met need is the estimated coverage in the at-risk group. Estimated using blocked weighted bootstrap estimation technique.
c Coverage ratio is the ratio of coverage estimates in at-risk vs. not at-risk groups. Estimated using blocked weighted bootstrap estimation technique.
d MPI score ≥ 0.33 is considered at risk of acute poverty.
e ICFI score < 6 is considered poor IYCF.