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Food and Agricultural Approaches to Reducing Malnutrition (FAARM)

S

Sabine Gabrysch

Status

Completed

Conditions

Malnutrition

Treatments

Behavioral: Homestead Food Production program

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02505711
01ER1201

Details and patient eligibility

About

The aim of this study is to evaluate the potential of reducing young child undernutrition in low-income countries through an integrated program that trains women's groups in agriculture, nutrition, child care and hygiene.

Full description

An estimated 165 million children worldwide suffer from chronic undernutrition which leads to compromised physical and cognitive development and prevents them from reaching their full potential. Nutrition-sensitive agricultural interventions that aim to increase dietary diversity, empower women and include an educational behaviour change component focused on nutrition and hygiene are a promising and sustainable approach to addressing undernutrition. However, evidence on the impact of such interventions is still scarce due to a lack of rigorous long-term evaluations.

This study will test the hypothesis that integrated agriculture, nutrition and hygiene interventions can reduce undernutrition when children benefit in their crucial first 1000 days. The investigators will conduct an impact evaluation of Helen Keller International's Homestead Food Production program in Bangladesh that trains women's groups in vegetable and fruit gardening, poultry rearing, hygiene, child care and nutrition. Furthermore, the investigators will assess the program impact pathway to discern how any impact is achieved (through improved food production, income, food security, health service use, female empowerment, feeding and hygiene practices).

The study design is a cluster-randomized controlled field trial in two sub-districts of Habiganj District, Sylhet Division, Bangladesh, including 2700 young women in 96 settlements. After the baseline survey in 2015, settlements will be randomized into 48 intervention and 48 control settlements. Women in the intervention settlements will receive training and support in Homestead Food Production during the following four years. A surveillance system will collect data on pregnancies, births, child development, nutrition and infections as well as pathway indicators. In 2019, the investigators will conduct the endline survey to assess the nutritional status of the 2700 women and their then approximately 1500 children below 3 years of age and compare between intervention and control.

Enrollment

2,705 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

15 to 30 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

For settlements:

  • Located in selected unions of Habiganj District, Sylhet Division, North East Bangladesh
  • Minimum distance to adjacent settlement at least 400 m
  • Judged to be suitable for Homestead Food Production program by the NGO HKI Bangladesh (dry land year-round, at least 10 women eligible and interested)

For women:

  • Married and aged 30 years or less at enumeration
  • Woman's husband stays overnight in household at least once a year
  • Access to at least 1 decimal of land, ideally 0.25 decimal near the house

For children:

  • Biological child of a participant woman
  • Aged 0-35 months at survey start or surveillance visit

Exclusion criteria

For women:

  • Lack of interest in participating in a gardening program

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

2,705 participants in 2 patient groups

Homestead Food Production
Experimental group
Description:
Enrolled in Homestead Food Production program from 2015 to 2019, 48 clusters, approx. 1350 women and 750 children
Treatment:
Behavioral: Homestead Food Production program
Control
No Intervention group
Description:
(Health system strengthening in the study area), 48 clusters, approx. 1350 women and 750 children

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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