| Literature DB >> 31740469 |
Vani Sethi1, Arti Bhanot2, Sourav Bhattacharjee3, Rajkumar Gope4, Debjeet Sarangi5, Vikash Nath4, Nirmala Nair4, Usha Singh6, Abner Daniel7, Rabi N Parhi8, Sonali Sinha3, Avinash Loomba9, Somya S10, Apollo Purty10, Naushad Ali11, Babita Mohapatra12, Neeraj Agarwal13, Vikas Bhatia14, Manisha Ruikar15, Bharati Sahu16, Reshmi R S17, Sarang Pedgaonkar17, Laxmi Kant Dwivedi17, Farhat Saiyed9, Mahendra Prajapati8, Preetu Mishra9, Audrey Prost18, Nita Kejrewal19, Arjan De Wagt7, Harshpal Sachdev20, Sayeed Unisa17.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Swabhimaan is a community-based programme to improve adolescent girls' and women's nutrition in the rural areas of three Indian states-Bihar, Chhattisgarh and Odisha with high prevalence of undernutrition. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Swabhimaan has a nested prospective, non-randomised controlled evaluation. Since 2017, five intervention sites receive community-led interventions through national government's livelihood mission supported women's self-help group federations and five control sites will initiate these activities 36 months later, in 2020. Community-led activities aim to improve coverage of 18 interventions including adequacy of food consumed, prevention of micronutrient deficiencies, access to basic health services and special care of nutritionally 'at risk' girls and women, improving hygiene and access to water and sanitation services and access to family planning services. The evaluation includes baseline (2016-2017), midline (2018-2019) and endline (2020-2021) surveys covering 6638 adolescent girls, 2992 pregnant women and 8755 mothers of children under 2. The final impact analysis will be by intention to treat, comparing primary and secondary outcomes in five intervention areas and five control areas. The primary outcomes are: (1) a 15% reduction in the proportion of adolescent girls with a body mass index (BMI) <18.5 kg/m2; (2) a 15% reduction in the proportion of mothers of children under two with a BMI <18.5 kg/m2 and (3) and a 0.4 cm improvement in mean mid-upper arm circumference among pregnant women. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: All procedures involving human subjects were approved by the Institutional Ethics Committee of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Bihar, Chhattisgarh and Odisha and in compliance with guidelines laid down in the Declaration of Helsinki. Evidence will inform maternal and preconception nutrition policy at national and state level. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: 58261b2f46876 and CTRI/2016/11/007482; Pre-results. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: India; adolescent girls; agriculture; multi-sector; nutrition; women collectives
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31740469 PMCID: PMC6886981 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-031632
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Evaluation design. VO, village organisation.
State-wise estimated total sample in intervention and control areas by target groups
| Bihar | Chhattisgarh | Odisha | Total | |
| Adolescent girls | 1750 | 3294 | 1594 | 6638 |
| Pregnant women | 748 | 1122 | 1122 | 2992 |
| Mothers of children under two | 2846 | 3294 | 4020 | 10 160 |
| Total | 5345 | 7710 | 6736 | 19 790 |
Nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive interventions package, Swabhimaan
| Relevant target group | |||
| Preconception | Pregnancy | Lactation | |
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| 1. Access to generalised household ration through Public Distribution System, a food subsidy scheme | * | * | * |
| 2. Balanced energy protein supplementation through access to supplementary rations | * | * | * |
| 3. Access to knowledge and choices about how to increase maternal dietary diversity | * | * | * |
| 4. Access to knowledge and support for nutrition-sensitive agriculture at home (kitchen garden) and community-based food insecurity coping strategies. | * | * | * |
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| 5. IFA supplementation | * | * | * |
| 6. Universal use of iodised salt | * | * | * |
| 7. Calcium supplementation and deworming | x | * | * |
| 8. Access to information and commodities like insecticide treated bed nets for malaria prevention | * | * | * |
| 9. Access to information on preventing tobacco and alcohol use in pregnancy | x | * | * |
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| 10. Early registration in outreach services | * | * | x |
| 11. Recording and monitoring of nutritional status and special community-based at-nutritional risk package | x | * | x |
| 12. Quality reproductive health, antenatal and postnatal care | * | * | * |
| 13. Access to knowledge and entitlements for promotion of institutional deliveries and maternity benefits | x | * | * |
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| 14. Sanitation and hygiene (including menstrual hygiene) education | * | * | * |
| 15. Access to safe drinking water and sanitation commodities | * | * | * |
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| 16. Promotion of secondary education and education for delaying the age at marriage to legal age | * | x | x |
| 17. Access to information and family planning commodities for delaying age at first pregnancy and prevention of repeated pregnancies | * | * | * |
| 18. Women’s collective voice and empowerment for decision-making to prevent child marriage, violence against women, child spacing and other gender-related issues | * | * | * |
IFA, iron folic acid; MUAC, mid-upper arm circumference; WASH, water, sanitation and hygiene.
Geographical scope and service providers for community-led interventions under Swabhimaan
| Bihar | Chhattisgarh | Odisha | Total | |
| Revenue villages | 77 | 111 | 168 | 356 |
| CLF and related (Tier-3) | 5 | 4 | 12 | 21 |
| VOs (Tier 2) | 72 | 80 | 79 | 231 |
| Poshan Sakhis or CRPs of Tier 2 | 72 | 100 | 79 | 251 |
| Kishori Sakhis of Tier 2 | 72 | – | – | 72 |
| SHGs (Tier-1) | 1985 | 1488 | 702 | 4175 |
| VRPs/Krishi mitras | 115 | 80 | 39 | 234 |
CLF, cluster-level federation; CRPs, community resource persons; SHGs, self-help groups; VOs, village organisations; VRPs, village resource persons.
Community-led interventions under Swabhimaan
| Responsible agency/service provider | Intervention | Frequency |
| Village organisation (VO) | ||
| Social action committee | Selection of Poshan Sakhi (1 per VO) | One time |
| Poshan sakhi/CRP | Integrated nutrition microplanning (12 days over | Once, followed by annual review |
| Maitri bethak (lit. friendly meeting) of women open to non-group members using Participatory Learning and Action | Monthly | |
| One additional monthly home visit/group meeting of nutritionally ‘at-risk’ women | Monthly | |
| Krishi mitra/VRP | Maitri kishan bethak (lit. friendly farmers meeting) on nutrition-sensitive agriculture Participatory Learning and Action | Monthly |
| Home-based Poshan beds/backyard poultry | Monthly | |
| CLF | ||
| Social action committee | Families with women and children at risk of undernutrition linked to agripoultry linkage and social protection schemes | Monthly |
| Loans for secondary education | Monthly | |
| Creating farmer training school sites | Monthly | |
| Training for Poshan sakhi and Krishi mitras | Quarterly | |
| Newly wed couples meetings | Biannual | |
| Entitlement camps and health checkups for SHG members | Biannual | |
| Review of integrated nutrition plan | Annual |
CLF, cluster-level federation; CRP, community resource person; SHG, self-help group; VRP, Village Resource Person.
Figure 2SRLM organisation structure and its adaptation in Swabhimaan, Bihar. BPMU, Block Project Management Unit; CRP, Community Resource Person; DPMU, District Project Management Unit; MIS, Management Information System; SPMU, State Project Management Unit; SRLM, State Rural Livelihoods Mission; VO, Village Organisation.