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WFP Cash, Food, and Voucher Study in Ecuador

I

International Food Policy Research Institute

Status

Completed

Conditions

Food Security

Treatments

Other: Voucher
Other: Cash
Other: Food

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02526147
6119-001

Details and patient eligibility

About

This evaluation is part of a five country project to evaluate the benefits and costs of the use of two alternatives to food transfers: vouchers and cash (hereafter referred to as "alternative modalities"). The project will generate information on how outcomes such as household food expenditure and dietary diversity, relevant to both beneficiaries and WFP, change following the introduction of these alternative modalities; how benefits and costs of these are, relative to food transfers, distributed across and within households; and what are the critical operational issues that need to be addressed for these alternatives to be successfully implemented. More specifically, the project will answer seven questions:

  1. Do households benefit from receipt of the alternative modalities?
  2. Are these benefits greater, or less, when transfers are made using alternative modalities compared to food transfers. How does this vary across outcomes (such as nutrition, livelihoods, gender dynamics and intra-household resource allocation) that are of especial interest to WFP?
  3. How does the distribution of benefits differ across households when transfers are made using alternative modalities compared to food transfers?
  4. How does the distribution of benefits differ within households when transfers are made using alternative modalities compared to food transfers? Do certain household members (women, young children) benefit more from one type of modality? How do these modalities affect decision-making processes within the household?
  5. Why are these differences observed? How do the reasons for these differences affect the study's ability to generalize from these evaluations?
  6. Does the delivery of alternative modalities cost less than food transfers? What accounts for these cost differences? Are some costs (such as transport) really lower or are they transferred to beneficiaries? Within the household, who bears these additional costs?
  7. What is the benefit: cost ratios associated with these different modalities from the perspective of WFP? Is there a conflict between the modality "preferred" by WFP and the modality "preferred" by beneficiaries?

These objectives will be accomplished through household survey data collection among a panel of households before and after transfer of alternative modalities. In addition, select countries will involve the collection of anthropometric, biomarker and cognitive testing.

Full description

In Ecuador, the intervention consists of food, food vouchers or cash transfers to Colombian refugees and poor Ecuadorian households in four urban and peri-urban areas of Carchi and Sucumbios in northern Ecuador. The transfer is given monthly for 6 months. The program is conditional on attendance at nutrition and community trainings occurring once a month. In most cases the transfer recipient is the female head of household or spouse, however in some cases men may also receive the transfer.

The study is a 2 stage randomized control trial where, first, 80 neighborhoods were randomized to either treatment or control group; second, treatment clusters (geographical units within neighborhoods) were randomized to either: cash, food voucher or food assistance. Approximately 20 - 28 participants from each of the 145 clusters were randomly selected for interviews. In addition to the household socio-economic survey, hemoglobin measures were taken from children between 6 months and 5 years of age and adolescent girls from age 10 to 16 years in each household. The baseline survey occurred in April 2011 and the endline in November 2011.

Interviews were conducted with female heads of households or spouses where possible, or with adult male head of households. In addition, hemoglobin was collected for all children ages 6 months to 5 years and for adolescent girls residing in surveyed households.

Enrollment

2,580 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Households in pre-selected neighborhoods in Carchi and Sucumbios with high poverty status according to the proxy means test.
  • For hemoglobin measurements, children residing in these households that are 6 months-5 years old, and adolescent girls 10-16 years old

Exclusion criteria

  • Households that receive the Bono de Desarrollo Humano
  • Children ages 6 months - 5 years who are severely sick

Trial design

2,580 participants in 4 patient groups

Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Receives no intervention
Cash
Experimental group
Description:
Household receives cash transfer monthly for 6 months
Treatment:
Other: Cash
Voucher
Experimental group
Description:
Household receives food voucher to use at local supermarket monthly for 6 months
Treatment:
Other: Voucher
Food
Experimental group
Description:
Household receives food transfer composed of rice, lentils, canned sardines, and vegetable oil, monthly for 6 months
Treatment:
Other: Food

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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