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The study on dairy value chains that will be conducted in Northern Senegal tests whether a health-related product (micro-fortified yogurt) targeted to children can be provided through the logistics of an existing value chain, and whether in return this can be leveraged to enhance the reliability of producers supply within this value chain. This study is conducted with a local milk factory, a recently established social enterprise, striving to produce dairy products with the milk collected from several hundred semi-nomadic small-scale producers in northern Senegal. This study tests: (i) whether the logistic created to collect milk in a remote area can be leveraged to deliver fortified yogurts to infants within its suppliers households; (ii) whether such products effectively help improve the nutritional status (anemia) of these children; and (iii) whether these health services encourage suppliers (and in particular women) to increase their milk delivery to the milk factory.
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Overall Objective
The overall study objectives are to better understand how a value chain can be made to be nutrition sensitive and ultimately leveraged to improve child nutrition, and to understand how certain incentives and services can be offered to actors within the value chain to enhance contractual relationships that strengthen the value chain.
In rural areas of developing countries where health products and services are poorly available, well organized agricultural value chains may be used to enhance access to such products and services to smallholder farmers. Yet, value chains in such countries face important challenges when it comes to enforcing contractual relationships, unless incentive-compatible schemes can be designed. As elsewhere, it may however be that health-related services themselves can, under certain conditions, serve as an adequate incentive towards more sustainable contractual relationships in the value chain.
Specific Objectives This study will address 2 key objectives.
The study will focus on the particular case of a dairy value chain in Senegal, and will assess the extent to which micronutrient fortified yogurts can be used as a means to reduce the prevalence of anemia among infants and young children, and reinforce contractual arrangements between milk suppliers and a recently established social enterprise, the local milk factory.
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471 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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