| Literature DB >> 28899434 |
Lauren Wilner1,2, Devika J Suri1,3, Breanne K Langlois4, Shelley Marcus Walton1, Beatrice Lorge Rogers1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In 2014, an intervention aimed at increasing the oil in corn soy blend (CSB) porridge prepared by caregivers of children with moderate acute malnutrition was implemented in Southern Malawi. This analysis describes the flow of key messages delivered through the Care Group model during this intervention.Entities:
Keywords: Corn soy blend; Food aid; Moderate acute malnutrition; Social and behavior change communication; Supplementary feeding
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28899434 PMCID: PMC5596483 DOI: 10.1186/s41043-017-0111-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Health Popul Nutr ISSN: 1606-0997 Impact factor: 2.000
Description of study groups
| Intervention group 1 | Intervention group 2 | Control group | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Supplementary food (distributed monthly for the period of 4 months) | 8 kg CSB (bulk) + 2.6 L fortified vegetable oil | 8 kg CSB (in 4 2-kg packages) + 2.6 L fortified vegetable oil | Standard program ration: 8 kg CSB (bulk) + 1 L fortified vegetable oil |
| SBCC | Intensified SBCC emphasizing the recommended preparation method, oil to CSB ratio, and targeting of supplement to beneficiary child | Intensified SBCC emphasizing the recommended preparation method, oil to CSB ratio, and targeting of supplement to beneficiary child; the repackaged CSB also included printed SBCC messaging | Standard program SBCC: general health messages on family planning, HIV, vaccinations, and other topics |
Fig. 1Flow of SBCC messages in the care group model used in this study
SBCC questions1 included on in-depth interviews to evaluate communication reportedly received and given2 among healthcare workers, care group volunteers, and caregivers
| Healthcare workers | Care group volunteers | Caregivers | |
|---|---|---|---|
| SBCC messages received | (1) From training | (4) From HCW | (6) From HCW or CGV |
| 1. Did they3 tell you about the ingredients that should be used to prepare CSB porridge? | |||
| SBCC messages given | (2) To CGVs and (3) caregivers | (5) To caregivers | N/A |
| 1. Do you tell them about the ingredients to use when preparing CSB porridge? | |||
Abbreviations: HCW healthcare worker, CGV care group volunteer, SBCC social and behavior change communication, CSB corn soy blend, N/A not applicable
1Response options were yes, no, or cannot remember/do not know. Healthcare workers and CGVs were both asked about what they were taught during training and what they taught to caregivers
2The six channels of communication evaluated are (1) information the HCW reported receiving; (2) information the HCW reported telling the CGV; (3) information the HCW reported telling the caregiver; (4) information the CGV reported receiving; (5) information the CGV reported telling the caregiver; (6) information the caregiver reported receiving
3“They” and “them” refer to the group that is either giving or receiving the SBCC messages. For example, “they” in the case of HCWs would be their trainers, in the case of CGVs would be the HCWs, and in the case of caregivers could be either the CGV or HCW
Fig. 2Percent reporting they provided or received each of five key SBCC messages during the program. The arrows indicate direction of information flow: at each point of each graph, those on the left side of the arrow are providing information and those on the right side of the arrow are receiving information
Example quotes from care group volunteers and caregivers
| Theme | Participant | Example quote |
|---|---|---|
| Roles within the community | Care group volunteers | “we help in identifying malnourished children and referring them to PCI health workers” |
| “we also go into the village to find beneficiaries” | ||
| “we meet once every month with the health promoter and they teach us how we can work in our areas” | ||
| “we go to the households of beneficiary children to see how they prepare the ration and we check if they are following the instructions” | ||
| “We inspect homes of beneficiary children to see if the mothers are properly feeding the children; if they are not, we remind them of the instructions that they were given.” | ||
| “We also empower women not to ultimately rely on the ration that they get … through teaching them how to prepare nutritious food from locally available materials.” | ||
| Communication process | Care group volunteers | “The health promoter comes to teach us on cooking porridge and other foods. Finally, we meet at one household where we teach the women what the health promoters taught us.” |
|
| ||
| Caregivers | “Yes, we do receive instructions on how to cook and take care of the ration. ” | |
| “The Health Promoters taught us all this.” | ||
| Knowledge exchange | Care group volunteers | “We teach the women how to prepare and feed the child corn soy blend porridge” |
| “we tell them that they should practice hygiene and the household should be clean” | ||
| “I encourage women not to sell or share the ration” | ||
| Caregivers | “Yes, we were told to first of all clean a pot and measure corn soy blend into the pot, then add 6 tablespoons of oil into the corn soy blend; then add water and stir thoroughly. After that, we were told to put the pot on fire and cook the porridge for 40 min.” | |
| “We were told not to sell or share the ration” | ||
| “We were told to take care of it and keep it safe from rats, roaches and dust” | ||
| “they also tell us not to share the foods to neighbors because they are medicine to the children” | ||
| “We were told to always use ration oil when preparing the porridge” | ||
| “They teach us on measurements; how much of the CSB and oil to use. They also instruct us to cook the CSB porridge for the beneficiary child only and always to measure the recommended amount.” |