Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The objective of the research is to test whether integrating a mother-baby nutrition toolkit into routine antenatal care service can improve maternal and infant nutrition in Amhara, Ethiopia
Full description
The high burden of undernutrition through the critical first 1,000 days persists in Ethiopia. Studies have indicated that approximately 1 in 4 women of reproductive age in Ethiopia are underweight, 17% of babies are born at low birth weight and nearly 50% of children are stunted by age 2. Inadequate diets of pregnant and breastfeeding women, both suboptimal quality and quantity, are a key contributor to maternal and infant undernutrition in Ethiopia.
The National Nutrition Strategy of Ethiopia, adopted in 2008, recommends one additional meal per day to support healthy pregnancy, and two extra meals per day to support lactation (US Agency for International Development (USAID), 2008).
Using the Health Belief Model for behavior change, the study team developed and has tested in other contexts a Healthy Baby Toolkit (HBT) designed to serve as a cue to action to improve maternal and family self-efficacy in providing mothers and their babies with adequate nutrition. The toolkit has previously been tested in India, Kenya, Malawi, and Ethiopia where it has demonstrated acceptability and feasibility, and demonstrated improvement in the diets of children between 6-23 months. This new trial aims to understand the added health benefits of introducing the toolkit to mothers during pregnancy and the early postpartum period when crucial child growth and development trajectories are established.
The study will evaluate the benefits of HBT on maternal nutrition and infant growth, especially during the first 500 days (pregnancy and first 6 months of life). It will also assess strategies for facility and community-based delivery of the toolkit for future rollout and scaling up. Findings from this study will create an evidence base for effective counseling strategies and support advocacy efforts to integrate the toolkit into routine nutrition education and counseling programs in Ethiopia.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
594 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Amy Webb Girard, PhD BSN; Moses Ekwueme, MSc
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal