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Recent evidence shows that early childhood is a critical period for investments in human capital and that micronutrient deficiency and inadequate stimulation are major causes of impaired child development in poor countries. These findings have increased interest in promoting nutrition interventions and preschool participation during early childhood. Transfers to households linked to preschool participation have the potential to improve nutrition and cognitive outcomes in young children. Receipt of transfers may induce improvements in diet quality and greater preschool participation, enhancing both nutrition and stimulation. However, there is limited evidence on the impacts of such programs, all of it from Latin America. There is also no evidence on the relative impact of different transfer modalities linked to preschool participation.
This study is a cluster-randomized controlled evaluation of a transfer program linked to preschool participation. The transfer program, administered by the World Food Programme, provides food or cash transfers to children aged 3-5 years enrolled in preschools at baseline. The preschools, operating in the Karamoja sub-region of Uganda, are supported by UNICEF and managed by District representatives of the Government of Uganda. The food transfers consist of multiple-micronutrient-fortified corn soy blend (CSB), oil, and sugar, totaling approximately 1200 calories per day per child and including 99% of iron requirements. Cash transfers equal the estimated value of the food basket if purchased in the market. Randomization into the food treatment, cash treatment or control was done across 98 preschools, referred to as Early Childhood Development (ECD) centers. The intervention period was from February 2011 to May 2012 and included distribution of transfers on a six-to-eight-week cycle. A longitudinal (panel) survey of households with children aged 3-5 years at baseline was conducted before exposure to the transfers and 18 months later. The randomized design of this effectiveness study and the panel nature of the data allow for a rigorous field trial in which impacts on nutrition and cognitive outcomes can be assessed and compared across modalities.
We examine the impacts of the two transfer modalities, cash transfers or multiple-micronutrient-fortified food transfers, linked to preschool enrollment, on child nutrition and cognitive development. In addition, we explore potential mechanisms through intermediate impacts on food intake and participation in preschools.
The key research objectives are to assess the following:
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Allocation: Randomized
This evaluation is conducted in communities surrounding Early Childhood Development (ECD) centers in the Karamoja sub-region of Uganda, in Napak, Kotido, and Kaabong districts. The catchment area of ECD centers serve as the clusters for randomization and analysis. After stratifying ECD centers (by district for Napak and Kotido, and by sub-district for the more spatially-diverse Kaabong), clusters were assigned to the treatment groups (FOOD, CASH and CTRL) using block randomization, to ensure as equal a distribution of ECD centers across treatment arms within each stratum as possible. Block randomization yielded 33 ECD centers in the FOOD group, 32 centers in the CASH group, and 33 centers in the CTRL group. Subsequently but prior to the start of the interventions, WFP re-assigned one CTRL center to FOOD, due to its proximity to a nearby FOOD center, in order to avoid migration of children which posed contamination concerns. WFP also re-assigned one CASH center to FOOD, because the cash distribution systems required use of mobile phones, and mobile phone signals were not readily available in the center's catchment area. The final assignment included 35 ECD centers in the FOOD group, 31 centers in the CASH group, and 32 centers in the CTRL group.
Statistical Analysis:
Ethics Review:
Funding:
This evaluation was funded by the World Food Programme, with support from the Spanish government and other sources through the Strategic Impact Evaluation Trust Fund at WFP, and by the United Nations Children's Fund.
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2,561 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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