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Alive & Thrive (A&T) is an initiative that supports the scaling up of nutrition interventions to save lives, prevent illnesses, and contribute to healthy growth and development through improved maternal nutrition, breastfeeding and complementary feeding practices. In Burkina Faso, A&T developed an intensive package of maternal nutrition interventions to be integrated into existing ANC services delivered through government health facilities that align with the latest global evidence. These included intensified counseling and support on dietary diversity and quality during pregnancy, iron-folic acid (IFA) supplements consumption, importance of ANC and increasing the number of visits, adequate weight-gain monitoring, and early initiation of and exclusive breastfeeding. The evaluation used a two-arm cluster-randomized, non-masked trial design, consisting of two cross-sectional surveys of pregnant and recently delivered women (i.e. with a child under 6 months of age) in 2019 and 2021.
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Routine antenatal care (ANC) offers opportunities to receive a broad range of health promotion and prevention services including support for adequate nutritional care for pregnant women and their newborns, and any required medical treatment. In 2016, World Health Organization (WHO) updated its guidelines on ANC with a high priority placed on nutrition interventions. These guidelines also recommended increasing the number of ANC from at least four to eight contacts to improve women's positive experience of care and to reduce perinatal morbidity and mortality. Following these new recommendations, the government of Burkina Faso is working with WHO and other partners to revise the national guidelines on ANC and test elements of the essential core package of routine ANC needed by women throughout pregnancy.
A&T Burkina Faso, developed an intensive package of maternal nutrition interventions to be integrated into existing ANC services delivered through government health facilities that align with the latest global evidence. These included intensified counseling and support on dietary diversity and quality during pregnancy, iron-folic acid (IFA) supplements consumption, importance of ANC and increasing the number of visits, adequate weight-gain monitoring, and early initiation of and exclusive breastfeeding. IFPRI tested the feasibility of the behavior-change interventions and examined their impacts on pregnant women's health and nutrition practices and breastfeeding practices of recently delivered women, compared with standard antenatal care services provided in control areas.
The study was designed as a two-arm cluster-randomized, non-masked trial, consisting of two cross-sectional surveys at baseline and endline. The unit of randomization was the health and social promotion center (CSPS, Centre de Santé et de Promotion Social in French) catchment area. 40 CSPS in Boucle du Mouhoun and 40 CSPS in Hauts-Bassins were randomly assigned to intervention/control. A baseline cluster/facility-level and household survey took place in November-December 2019. Soon after the completion of the baseline survey, the interventions were implemented at the CSPS and villages within the intervention areas for approximately 10 months (less than 1 year, caused by brief service interruptions in March-April 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic). The endline survey took place in January-March 2021.
The overall study objective is to evaluate the feasibility of integrating locally relevant maternal nutrition interventions into ANC services provided by the government health system and their impact on diet quality and quantity and utilization of nutrition interventions during pregnancy.
The implementation research study addresses three research questions:
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8,110 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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