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Journal Article

Assessing progress on the coverage of interventions in the first 1000 days in India: Role of national programs

2024

Avula, Rasmi; Nguyen, Phuong; Christopher, Anita; Gune, Soyra; Bhatia, Neena; Chauhan, Alka; Dwivedi, L. K.; Kapur, Avani; Pedgaonkar, Sarang; Shukla, Ritwik
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Chakrabarti, Suman; Singh, Shri Kant; Menon, Purnima

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Assessing progress on the coverage of interventions in the first 1000 days in India: Role of national programs

Background
High coverage of nutrition-specific interventions is critical to meet global nutrition targets, and it is imperative to understand how to attain it. We examined trends and inequalities in the coverage of interventions in India and the role of the National Nutrition Mission (NNM) in achieving improvements.

Methods
We conducted trends and equity analysis of 30 interventions using two rounds of National Family Health Survey data (2015–2016, n=1 78 874, and 2019–2021, n=1 70 697). We also compared coverage between states that received incentives and monitoring under NNM and those that did not. We reviewed programme documents and grey literature to construct a policy timeline to trace pathways to coverage improvement and consulted with stakeholders to confirm interpretation of findings.

Findings
Between 2016 and 2021, coverage improved significantly for nearly all interventions (~1–22 percentage points (pp) during pregnancy, ~7–20 pp during delivery/postpartum and~5–17 pp during early childhood). Improvements in coverage were higher among the poor and in rural areas compared with the rich and in urban areas, respectively; wealth and residence gaps narrowed for most interventions. These improvements could be traced to community mobilisation, technology and monitoring under NNM. Improvements in coverage of growth monitoring and counselling were higher in states that received additional incentives and monitoring under NNM. Stakeholders concurred that the improvements in coverage were likely driven by NNM.

Interpretation
Focused policy attention and programmatic efforts improved coverage and reduced inequities indicating an inclusive approach. Persistent coverage gaps for certain interventions require further inquiry.

Year published

2024

Authors

Avula, Rasmi; Nguyen, Phuong; Christopher, Anita; Gune, Soyra; Bhatia, Neena; Chauhan, Alka; Dwivedi, L. K.; Kapur, Avani; Pedgaonkar, Sarang; Shukla, Ritwik; Chakrabarti, Suman; Singh, Shri Kant; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Avula, Rasmi; Nguyen, Phuong; Christopher, Anita; Gune, Soyra; Bhatia, Bhatia; Chauhan, Alka; et al. 2024. Assessing progress on the coverage of interventions in the first 1000 days in India: role of national programs. Assessing progress on the coverage of interventions in the first 1000 days in India: Role of national programs. BMJ Global Health 9(12): e015246. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2024-015246

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Asia; Southern Asia; Data; Maternal and Child Health; Nutrition; Research Methods

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

National Policies and Strategies

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Utilization of Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) and its linkages with undernutrition in India

2024

Singh, Shri K; Chauhan, Alka; Alderman, Harold; Avula, Rasmi; Dwivedi, Laxmi K; Kapoor, Rati; Meher, Trupti; Menon, Purnima; Nguyen, Phuong; Pedgaonker, Sarang
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Puri, Parul; Chakrabarti, Suman

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Utilization of Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) and its linkages with undernutrition in India

The Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) programme has been the central focus of the POSHAN Abhiyaan to combat maternal and child malnutrition under the national nutrition mission in India. This paper examined the linkages between utilization of ICDS and underweight among children aged 6-59 months. The study utilized data from two recent rounds of the National Family Health Survey (NFHS-4 [2015-2016] and NFHS-5 [2019-2021]). Descriptive analyses were used to assess the change in utilization of ICDS and the prevalence of underweight at the national and state levels. Multivariable logistic regressions were performed to examine factors associated with the utilization of ICDS and underweight. Linkages between utilization of ICDS and underweight were examined using the difference-in-differences (DID) approach. Utilization of ICDS increased from 58% in 2015-2016 to 71% in 2019-2021. The prevalence of underweight decreased from 37% to 32% in the same period. Changes in ICDS utilization and underweight prevalence varied considerably across states, socioeconomic and demographic characteristics. Results from decomposition of DID models suggest that improvements in ICDS explained 9%-12% of the observed reduction in underweight children between 2016 and 2021, suggesting that ICDS made a modest but meaningful contribution in addressing undernutrition among children aged 6-59 months in this period.

Year published

2024

Authors

Singh, Shri K; Chauhan, Alka; Alderman, Harold; Avula, Rasmi; Dwivedi, Laxmi K; Kapoor, Rati; Meher, Trupti; Menon, Purnima; Nguyen, Phuong; Pedgaonker, Sarang; Puri, Parul; Chakrabarti, Suman

Citation

Singh, Shri K.; Chauhan, Alka; Alderman, Harold; Avula, Rasmi; Dwivedi, Laxmi K.; Kapoor, Rati; et al. 2024. Utilization of Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) and its linkages with undernutrition in India. Maternal and Child Nutrition 20(3): e13644. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.13644

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Asia; Southern Asia; Child Development; Child Health; Child Nutrition; Nutrition Interventions; Nutrition Policies; Nutritional Status; Underweight

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

National Policies and Strategies

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Journal Article

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Journal Article

Concurrent undernutrition and overnutrition within indian families between 2006 and 2021

2023Dwivedi, Laxmi Kant; Puri, Parul; Pant, Anjali; Chauhan, Alka; Scott, Samuel; Sigh, Shrikant; Pedgaonkar, Sarang; Nguyen, Phuong Hong

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Concurrent undernutrition and overnutrition within indian families between 2006 and 2021

Background The double burden of malnutrition (DBM), characterized by concurrent undernutrition and overnutrition, is a growing global concern. Families share resources and eating behaviors and programs often target households, yet evidence of the DBM at the family level is scarce. Objectives This study examined trends and inequality in the intrahousehold DBM in India between 2006 and 2021. Methods Data were from 3 waves of India’s National Family Health Survey (NFHS 2006, 2016, and 2021). We examined 3 types of household member (with children aged <5 y) combinations: mother–child (N = 328,039 across 3 waves), father–child, and parent (mother and father)–child (N = 47,139 for each pair). The DBM was defined as one or more individuals with undernutrition (either wasting or stunting in children or underweight in adults) and one or more overweight individuals within the same household. DBM was examined over time, at national and subnational levels, and by residence and wealth. Results Nearly all DBM was in the form of an overweight parent and an undernourished weight or stunted child. The prevalence of parent–child DBM increased from 15% in 2006 to 26% in 2021. Father–child pairs experienced the most rapid DBM increase, from 12% in 2006 to 22% in 2021, an 83% increase, driven by increasing overweight among men. In 2021, the DBM was highest in North-Eastern and Southern states, and among relatively rich households from urban areas. The increase in the DBM was faster in rural areas and among poor households compared with that in urban areas and rich households. Urban–rural and rich–poor inequalities in the DBM have decreased over time. Conclusions The intrahousehold DBM has increased over time, affecting 1 in 4 households in India in 2021. Family-based interventions that can simultaneously address child underweight and parent overweight are required to address India’s increasing intrahousehold DBM.

Year published

2023

Authors

Dwivedi, Laxmi Kant; Puri, Parul; Pant, Anjali; Chauhan, Alka; Scott, Samuel; Sigh, Shrikant; Pedgaonkar, Sarang; Nguyen, Phuong Hong

Citation

Dwivedi, Laxmi Kant; Puri, Parul; Pant, Anjali; Chauhan, Alka; Scott, Samuel; Sigh, Shrikant; Pedgaoker, Sarang; and Nguyen, Phuong. 2023. Concurrent undernutrition and overnutrition within indian families between 2006 and 2021. Current Developments in Nutrition 7(9): 101987. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cdnut.2023.101987

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Anthropometry; Households; Stunting; Capacity Development; Malnutrition; Behaviour; Equality; Overweight

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Benefit-cost analysis of iron fortification of rice in India: Modelling potential economic gains from improving haemoglobin and averting anaemia

2023Qureshy, Lubina Fatimah; Alderman, Harold; Manchanda, Navneet

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Benefit-cost analysis of iron fortification of rice in India: Modelling potential economic gains from improving haemoglobin and averting anaemia

Year published

2023

Authors

Qureshy, Lubina Fatimah; Alderman, Harold; Manchanda, Navneet

Citation

Qureshy, Lubina Fatimah; Alderman, Harold; and Manchanda, Navneet. 2023. Benefit-cost analysis of iron fortification of rice in India: Modelling potential economic gains from improving haemoglobin and averting anaemia. Journal of Development Effectiveness 15(1): 91-110. https://doi.org/10.1080/19439342.2023.2168728

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Iron; Biofortification; Benefit-cost Ratio; Rice; Modeling; Economic Value; Haemoglobin; Anaemia; Fortified Foods; School Feeding; Productivity; Development

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Project

Rethinking Food Markets

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Journal Article

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Journal Article

Disruptions, restorations and adaptations to health and nutrition service delivery in multiple states across India over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020: An observational study

2022Avula, Rasmi; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Ashok, Sattvika; Sumati, Baja; Pant, Anjali; Walia, Monika; Kachwaha, Shivani

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Disruptions, restorations and adaptations to health and nutrition service delivery in multiple states across India over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020: An observational study

Modeling studies estimated severe impacts of potential service delivery disruptions due to COVID-19 pandemic on maternal and child nutrition outcomes. Although anecdotal evidence exists on disruptions, little is known about the actual state of service delivery at scale. We studied disruptions and restorations, challenges and adaptations in health and nutrition service delivery by frontline workers (FLWs) in India during COVID-19 in 2020.

Year published

2022

Authors

Avula, Rasmi; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Ashok, Sattvika; Sumati, Baja; Pant, Anjali; Walia, Monika; Kachwaha, Shivani

Citation

Avula, Rasmi; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Ashok, Sattvika; Sumati, Baja; Pant, Anjali; Walia, Monika; Menon, Purnima; Kachwaha, Shivani; et al. 2022. Disruptions, restorations and adaptations to health and nutrition service delivery in multiple states across India over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020: An observational study. PLoS ONE 17(7): e0269674. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0269674

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Health; Covid-19; Child Health; Modelling; Labour; Nutrition

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Can digitally enabling community health and nutrition workers improve services delivery to pregnant women and mothers of infants? Quasi-experimental evidence from a national-scale nutrition programme in India

2022Patil, Sumeet R.; Nimmagadda, Sneha; Gopalakrishnan, Lakshmi; Avula, Rasmi; Bajaj, Sumati; Diamond-Smith, Nadia; Paul, Anushman; Menon, Purnima; Walker, Dilys

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Can digitally enabling community health and nutrition workers improve services delivery to pregnant women and mothers of infants? Quasi-experimental evidence from a national-scale nutrition programme in India

Background: India’s 1.4 million community health and nutrition workers (CHNWs) serve 158 million beneficiaries under the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) programme. We assessed the impact of a data capture, decision support, and job-aid mobile app for the CHNWs on two primary outcomes—(1) timeliness of home visits and (2) appropriate counselling specific to the needs of pregnant women and mothers of children <12 months. Methods: We used a quasi-experimental pair-matched controlled trial using repeated cross-sectional surveys to evaluate the intervention in Bihar and Madhya Pradesh (MP) separately using an intention-to-treat analysis. The study was powered to detect difference of 5–9 percentage points (pp) with type I error of 0.05 and type II error of 0.20 with endline sample of 6635 mothers of children <12 months and 2398 pregnant women from a panel of 841 villages. Results: Among pregnant women and mothers of children <12 months, recall of counselling specific to the trimester of pregnancy or age of the child as per ICDS guidelines was higher in both MP (11.5pp (95% CI 7.0pp to 16.0pp)) and Bihar (8.0pp (95% CI 5.3pp to 10.7pp)). Significant differences were observed in the proportion of mothers of children <12 months receiving adequate number of home visits as per ICDS guidelines (MP 8.3pp (95% CI 4.1pp to 12.5pp), Bihar: 7.9pp (95% CI 4.1pp to 11.6pp)). Coverage of children receiving growth monitoring increased in Bihar (22pp (95% CI 0.18 to 0.25)), but not in MP. No effects were observed on infant and young child feeding practices. Conclusion: The at-scale app integrated with ICDS improved provision of services under the purview of CHNWs but not those that depended on systemic factors, and was relatively more effective when baseline levels of services were low. Overall, digitally enabling CHNWs can complement but not substitute efforts for strengthening health systems and addressing structural barriers.

Year published

2022

Authors

Patil, Sumeet R.; Nimmagadda, Sneha; Gopalakrishnan, Lakshmi; Avula, Rasmi; Bajaj, Sumati; Diamond-Smith, Nadia; Paul, Anushman; Menon, Purnima; Walker, Dilys

Citation

Patil, Sumeet R.; Nimmagadda, Sneha; Gopalakrishnan, Lakshmi; Avula, Rasmi; Bajaj, Sumati; Diamond-Smith, Nadia; Paul, Anushman; Menon, Purnima; amd Walker, Dilys. 2022. Can digitally enabling community health and nutrition workers improve services delivery to pregnant women and mothers of infants? Quasi-experimental evidence from a national-scale nutrition programme in India. BMJ Global Health 6(5): e007298. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2021-007298

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Pregnancy; Child Development; Surveys; Health; Services; Data Collection; Labour; Counselling; Nutrition; Feeding Practices; Decision Making; Information and Communication Technologies; Health Care; Women; Digital Technology; Communities

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Anaemia in Indians aged 10–19 years: Prevalence, burden and associated factors at national and regional levels

2022Scott, Samuel; Lahiri, Anwesha; Sethi, Vani; de Wagt, Arjan; Menon, Purnima; Yadav, Kapil; Varghese, Mini; Joe, William; Vir, Sheila C.; Nguyen, Phuong Hong

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Anaemia in Indians aged 10–19 years: Prevalence, burden and associated factors at national and regional levels

Anaemia control programmes in India are hampered by a lack of representative evidence on anaemia prevalence, burden and associated factors for adolescents. The aim of this study was to: (1) describe the national and subnational prevalence, severity and burden of anaemia among Indian adolescents; (2) examine factors associated with anaemia at national and regional levels. Data (n = 14,673 individuals aged 10–19 years) were from India's Comprehensive National Nutrition Survey (CNNS, 2016–2018). CNNS used a multistage, stratified, probability proportion to size cluster sampling design. Prevalence was estimated using globally comparable age- and sex-specific cutoffs, using survey weights for biomarker sample collection. Burden analysis used prevalence estimates and projected population from 2011 Census data. Multivariable logistic regression models were used to analyse factors (diet, micronutrient deficiencies, haemoglobinopathies, sociodemographic factors, environment) associated with anaemia. Anaemia was present in 40% of girls and 18% of boys, equivalent to 72 million adolescents in 2018, and varied by region (girls 29%–46%; boys 11%–28%) and state (girls 7%–62%; boys 4%–32%). Iron deficiency (ferritin < 15 μg/L) was the strongest predictor of anaemia (odds ratio [OR]: 4.68, 95% confidence interval [CI]: [3.21,6.83]), followed by haemoglobinopathies (HbA2 > 3.5% or any HbS) (OR: 2.81, 95% CI: [1.66,4.74]), vitamin A deficiency (serum retinol <20 ng/ml) (OR: 1.86, 95% CI: [1.23,2.80]) and zinc deficiency (serum zinc < 70 μg/L) (OR: 1.32, 95% CI: [1.02,1.72]). Regional models show heterogeneity in the strength of association between factors and anaemia by region. Adolescent anaemia control programmes in India should continue to address iron deficiency, strengthen strategies to identify haemoglobinopathies and other micronutrient deficiencies, and further explore geographic variation in associated factors.

Year published

2022

Authors

Scott, Samuel; Lahiri, Anwesha; Sethi, Vani; de Wagt, Arjan; Menon, Purnima; Yadav, Kapil; Varghese, Mini; Joe, William; Vir, Sheila C.; Nguyen, Phuong Hong

Citation

Scott, Samuel; Lahiri, Anwesha; Sethi, Vani; de Wagt, Arjan; Menon, Purnima; Yadav, Kapil; Varghese, Mini; Joe, William; Vir, Sheila C.; and Nguyen, Phuong Hong. Anaemia in Indians aged 10–19 years: Prevalence, burden and associated factors at national and regional levels. Maternal and Child Nutrition 18(4): e13391. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.13391

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Anaemia; Adolescents; Trace Element Deficiencies; Trace Elements; Public Health

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Changes in anemia and anthropometry during adolescence predict learning outcomes: Findings from a 3-year longitudinal study in India

2022Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Walia, Monika; Pant, Anjali; Menon, Purnima; Scott, Samuel

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Changes in anemia and anthropometry during adolescence predict learning outcomes: Findings from a 3-year longitudinal study in India

Background: Anemia and poor physical growth during adolescence have far-ranging consequences, but limited longitudinal evidence exists on how changes in these factors relate to changes in learning skills as adolescents mature. Objectives: We examined the association between changes in anemia and physical growth during adolescence and learning outcomes. Methods: We used longitudinal data from the Understanding the Lives of Adolescents and Young Adults (UDAYA) project, which surveyed adolescents aged 10–19 years in northern India in 2015–16 and 2018–19 (n = 5963). We used multilevel mixed-effects logistic regression models to examine associations between changes in anemia/thinness/stunting status (four groups: never, improved, new, and persistent) and reading (ability to read a story) and math proficiency (ability to solve division problems) at follow-up. Results: Persistent anemia and stunting were higher among girls than boys (46% vs.8% and 37% vs. 14%, respectively), but persistent thinness was lower (7% vs. 16%). Improvement in anemia, thinness and stunting was 1.4–1.7 times higher among boys than girls. Boys who were anemic in both waves were 74% (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] 0.26, 95% confidence interval [CI)]: 0.12,0.59) and 65% (AOR 0.35, 95%CI: 0.16,0.76) less likely to be able to read a story and solve division problems, respectively, compared to boys who were non-anemic in both waves. Persistent thinness in boys was negatively associated with both reading (AOR 0.37, 95% CI: 0.21,0.66) and math proficiency (AOR 0.27, 95% CI: 0.16,0.46). Persistent stunting contributed to lower reading and math proficiency in boys and girls (AORs: 0.29 to 0.46). Boys whose anemia or thinness status improved and girls whose stunting status improved had similar learning skills at follow-up as those who were never anemic/thin/stunted. Conclusions: Persistent anemia, thinness and short stature during adolescence was associated with poor learning. Programs targeted at adolescents should contribute to nurturing environments that foster healthy growth and learning.

Year published

2022

Authors

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Walia, Monika; Pant, Anjali; Menon, Purnima; Scott, Samuel

Citation

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Walia, Monika; Pant, Anjali; Menon, Purnima; and Scott, Samuel. 2022. Changes in anemia and anthropometry during adolescence predict learning outcomes: Findings from a 3-year longitudinal study in India. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 115(6): 1549–1558. https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/nqac028

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Anaemia; Education; Adolescents; Mathematics; Anthropometry; Learning; Stunting

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

A Quasi-Experimental Evaluation of a Nutrition Behavior Change Intervention Delivered Through Women’s Self-Help Groups in Rural India: Impacts on Maternal and Young Child Diets, Anthropometry, and Intermediate Outcomes

2022Scott, Samuel; Gupta, Shivani; Menon, Purnima; Raghunathan, Kalyani; Thai, Giang; Quisumbing, Agnes R.; Kumar, Neha

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A Quasi-Experimental Evaluation of a Nutrition Behavior Change Intervention Delivered Through Women’s Self-Help Groups in Rural India: Impacts on Maternal and Young Child Diets, Anthropometry, and Intermediate Outcomes

Background: Women's self-help groups (SHGs) have become one of the largest institutional platforms serving the poor. Nutrition behavior change communication (BCC) interventions delivered through SHGs may improve maternal and child nutrition outcomes. Objective: To understand the effects of a nutrition BCC intervention delivered through SHGs in rural India on intermediate outcomes and nutrition outcomes. Methods: We compared 16 matched blocks where communities were supported to form SHGs and improve livelihoods; 8 blocks received a 3-year nutrition intensive (NI) intervention with nutrition BCC, agriculture- and rights-based information, facilitated by a trained female volunteer; another 8 blocks received standard activities (STD) to support savings/livelihoods. Repeated cross-sectional surveys of mother-child pairs were conducted in 2017-18 (n = 1609 pairs) and 2019-20 (n = 1841 pairs). We matched treatment groups over time and applied difference-in-difference regression models to estimate impacts on intermediate outcomes (knowledge, income, agriculture/livelihoods, rights, empowerment) and nutrition outcomes (child feeding, woman's diet, woman and child anthropometry). Analyses were repeated on households with at least one SHG member. Results: 40% of women were SHG members and 50% were from households with at least one SHG member. Only 10% of women in NI blocks had heard of intervention content at endline. Knowledge improved in both NI and STD groups. There was a positive NI impact on knowledge of timely introduction of animal sourced foods to children (p<0.05) but not on other intermediate outcomes. No impacts were observed for anthropometry or diet indicators except child animal source food consumption (p<0.01). In households with at least one SHG member, there was a positive NI impact on child unhealthy food consumption (p<0.05). Conclusions: Limited impacts may be due to limited exposure or skills of volunteers, and a concurrent national nutrition campaign. Our findings add to a growing literature on SHG-based BCC interventions and the conditions necessary for their success.

Year published

2022

Authors

Scott, Samuel; Gupta, Shivani; Menon, Purnima; Raghunathan, Kalyani; Thai, Giang; Quisumbing, Agnes R.; Kumar, Neha

Citation

Scott, Samuel; Gupta, Shivani; Menon, Purnima; Raghunathan, Kalyani; Thai, Giang; Quisumbing, Agnes R.; Kumar, Neha; et al. 2022. A quasi-experimental evaluation of a nutrition behavior change intervention delivered through women’s self-help groups in rural India: Impacts on maternal and young child diets, anthropometry and intermediate outcomes. Current Developments in Nutrition 6(6): nzac079. https://doi.org/10.1093/cdn/nzac079

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Nutrition; Behaviour; Gender; Women; Rural Areas; Self-help Groups; Diet; Children; Anthropometry; Infant Feeding; Child Feeding; Behavioral Economics

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

Project

Transforming Agrifood Systems in South Asia

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Reducing childhood stunting in India: Insights from four subnational success cases

2022Avula, Rasmi; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Tran, Lan Mai; Kaur, Supreet; Bhatia, Neena; Sarwal, Rakesh; de Wagt, Arjan; Chaudhery, Deepika Nayar; Menon, Purnima

Details

Reducing childhood stunting in India: Insights from four subnational success cases

Global success case analyses have identified factors supporting reductions in stunting across countries; less is known about successes at the subnational levels. We studied four states in India, assessing contributors to reductions in stunting between 2006 and 2016. Using public datasets, literature review, policy analyses and stakeholder interviews, we interpreted changes in the context of policies, programs and enabling environment. Primary contributors to stunting reduction were improvements in coverage of health and nutrition interventions (ranged between 11 to 23% among different states), household conditions (22–47%), and maternal factors (15–30%). Political and bureaucratic leadership engaged civil society and development partners facilitated change. Policy and program actions to address the multidimensional determinants of stunting reduction occur in sectors addressing poverty, food security, education, health services and nutrition programs. Therefore, for stunting reduction, focus should be on implementing multisectoral actions with equity, quality, and intensity with assured convergence on the same geographies and households.

Year published

2022

Authors

Avula, Rasmi; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Tran, Lan Mai; Kaur, Supreet; Bhatia, Neena; Sarwal, Rakesh; de Wagt, Arjan; Chaudhery, Deepika Nayar; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Avula, Rasmi; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Tran, Lan Mai; Kaur, Supreet; Bhatia, Neena; Sarwal, Rakesh; de Wagt, Arjan; Chaudhery, Deepika Nayar; and Menon, Purnima. 2022. Reducing childhood stunting in India: Insights from four subnational success cases. Food Security 14:1085-1097. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12571-021-01252-x

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Health; Households; Stunting; Multi-stakeholder Processes; Nutrition; Nutrition Interventions; Child Stunting

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Specificity matters: Unpacking impact pathways of individual interventions within bundled packages helps interpret the limited impacts of a maternal nutrition intervention in India

2022Kachwaha, Shivani; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Tran, Lan Mai; Avula, Rasmi; Young, Melissa F.; Menon, Purnima

Details

Specificity matters: Unpacking impact pathways of individual interventions within bundled packages helps interpret the limited impacts of a maternal nutrition intervention in India

Background: To address gaps in coverage and quality of nutrition services, Alive & Thrive (A&T) strengthened the delivery of maternal nutrition interventions through government antenatal care (ANC) services in Uttar Pradesh, India. The impact evaluation of the A&T interventions compared intensive (I-ANC) to standard (S-ANC) areas and found modest impacts on micronutrient supplementation, dietary diversity, and weight gain monitoring. Objectives: This study examined intervention-specific program impact pathways (PIP) and identified reasons for limited impacts of the A&T maternal nutrition intervention package. Methods: We used mixed methods: frontline workers surveys (FLWs, n∼500); counseling observations (n = 407); and qualitative in-depth interviews with FLWs, supervisors, and block-level staff (n = 59). We assessed seven PIP domains: training and materials, knowledge, supportive supervision, supply chains, data use, service delivery, and counseling. Results: Exposure to training improved in both I-ANC and S-ANC areas with more job aids used in I-ANC versus S-ANC (90 vs.70%), but gaps remained for training content and refresher trainings. FLW's knowledge improvement was higher in I-ANC than S-ANC (22–36 percentage points), but knowledge on micronutrient supplement benefits and recommended foods was insufficient (<50%). Most FLWs received supervision (>90%), but supportive supervision was limited by staff vacancies and competing work priorities. Supplies of iron-folic acid and calcium supplements were low in both areas (30–50% stock-outs). Use of monitoring data during review meetings was higher in I-ANC than S-ANC (52 vs. 36%), but was constrained by time, understanding, and data quality. Service provision improved in both I-ANC and S-ANC areas, but counseling on supplement benefits and weight gain monitoring were low (30–40%). Conclusions: Systems-strengthening efforts improved maternal nutrition interventions in ANC, but gaps remained. Taking an intervention-specific perspective to the PIP analysis in this package of services was critical to understand how common and specific barriers influenced overall program impact.

Year published

2022

Authors

Kachwaha, Shivani; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Tran, Lan Mai; Avula, Rasmi; Young, Melissa F.; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Kachwaha, Shivani; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Mai Tran, Lan; Avula, Rasmi; Young, Melissa; Menon, Purnima; et al. 2022. Specificity matters: Unpacking impact pathways of individual interventions within bundled packages helps interpret the limited impacts of a maternal nutrition intervention in India. Journal of Nutrition 152(2): 612-629. https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/nxab390

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Models; Food Supplements; Weight Gain; Nutrition; Trace Elements; Supplementary Feeding; Diet; Maternal Nutrition; Dietary Diversity

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Strategies and interventions for healthy adolescent growth, nutrition, and development

2022Hargreaves, Dougal; Mates, Emily; Menon, Purnima; Alderman, Harold; Devakumar, Delan; Nguyen, Phuong Hong

Details

Strategies and interventions for healthy adolescent growth, nutrition, and development

Year published

2022

Authors

Hargreaves, Dougal; Mates, Emily; Menon, Purnima; Alderman, Harold; Devakumar, Delan; Nguyen, Phuong Hong

Citation

Hargreaves, Dougal; Mates, Emily; Menon, Purnima; Alderman, Harold; Devakumar, Delan; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; et al. 2022. Strategies and interventions for healthy adolescent growth, nutrition, and development. Lancet 399(10320): 198-210. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(21)01593-2

Keywords

Food Environment; Development; Adolescents; Households; Nutrition; Trace Elements; Diet; Food Systems

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Nourishing our future: The Lancet Series on adolescent nutrition

2022Patton, George C.; Neufeld, Lynnette M.; Dogra, Surabhi; Frongillo, Edward A.; Hargreaves, Dougal; He, Shanshan; Mates, Emily; Menon, Purnima

Details

Nourishing our future: The Lancet Series on adolescent nutrition

Year published

2022

Authors

Patton, George C.; Neufeld, Lynnette M.; Dogra, Surabhi; Frongillo, Edward A.; Hargreaves, Dougal; He, Shanshan; Mates, Emily; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Patton, George C.; Neufeld, Lynnette M.; Dogra, Surabhi; Frongillo, Edward A.; Hargreaves, Dougal; He, Shanshan; Mates, Emily; Menon, Purnima; et al. 2022. Nourishing our future: The Lancet Series on adolescent nutrition. Lancet 399(10320): 123-125. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(21)02140-1

Keywords

Adolescents; Child Development; Health; Nutrition; Growth

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Association between supportive supervision and performance of community health workers in India: A longitudinal multi-level analysis

2021Gopalakrishnan, Lakshmi; Diamond-Smith, Nadia; Avula, Rasmi; Menon, Purnima; Fernald, Lia; Walker, Dilys; Patil, Sumeet

Details

Association between supportive supervision and performance of community health workers in India: A longitudinal multi-level analysis

Introduction Community health workers (CHWs) deliver services at-scale to reduce maternal and child undernutrition, but often face inadequate support from the health system to perform their job well. Supportive supervision is a promising intervention that strengthens the health system and can enable CHWs to offer quality services. Objectives We examined if greater intensity of supportive supervision as defined by monitoring visits to Anganwadi Centre, CHW-supervisor meetings, and training provided by supervisors to CHWs in the context of Integrated Child Services Development (ICDS), a national nutrition program in India, is associated with higher performance of CHWs. Per program guidelines, we develop the performance of CHWs measure by using an additive score of nutrition services delivered by CHWs. We also tested to see if supportive supervision is indirectly associated with CHW performance through CHW knowledge. Methods We used longitudinal survey data of CHWs from an impact evaluation of an at-scale technology intervention in Madhya Pradesh and Bihar. Since the inception of ICDS, CHWs have received supportive supervision from their supervisors to provide services in the communities they serve. Mixed-effects logistic regression models were used to test if higher intensity supportive supervision was associated with improved CHW performance. The model included district fixed effects and random intercepts for the sectors to which supervisors belong. Results Among 809 CHWs, the baseline proportion of better performers was 45%. Compared to CHWs who received lower intensity of supportive supervision, CHWs who received greater intensity of supportive supervision had 70% higher odds (AOR 1.70, 95% CI 1.16, 2.49) of better performance after controlling for their baseline performance, CHW characteristics such as age, education, experience, caste, timely payment of salaries, Anganwadi Centre facility index, motivation, and population served in their catchment area. A test of mediation indicated that supportive supervision is associated indirectly with CHW performance through improvement in CHW knowledge. Conclusion Higher intensity of supportive supervision is associated with improved CHW performance directly and through knowledge of CHWs. Leveraging institutional mechanisms such as supportive supervision could be important in improving service delivery to reach beneficiaries and potentially better infant and young child feeding practices and nutritional outcomes.

Year published

2021

Authors

Gopalakrishnan, Lakshmi; Diamond-Smith, Nadia; Avula, Rasmi; Menon, Purnima; Fernald, Lia; Walker, Dilys; Patil, Sumeet

Citation

Gopalakrishnan, Lakshmi; Diamond-Smith, Nadia; Avula, Rasmi; Menon, Purnima; Fernald, Lia; Walker, Dilys; and Patil, Sumeet. 2021. Association between supportive supervision and performance of community health workers in India: A longitudinal multi-level analysis. Human Resources for Health 19: 145. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12960-021-00689-7

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Child Development; Health; Training; Nutrition; Health Care; Communities

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Maternal diets in India: Gaps, barriers, and opportunities

2021Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Kachwaha, Shivani; Tran, Lan Mai; Sanghvi, Tina; Ghosh, Sebanti; Menon, Purnima

Details

Maternal diets in India: Gaps, barriers, and opportunities

Suboptimal dietary intake is a critical cause of poor maternal nutrition, with several adverse consequences both for mothers and for their children. This study aimed to (1) assess maternal dietary patterns in India; (2) examine enablers and barriers in adopting recommended diets; (3) review current and program strategies to improve dietary intakes. We used mixed methods, including empirical analysis, compiling data from available national and subnational surveys, and reviewing literature, policy, and program strategies. Diets among pregnant women are characterized by low energy, macronutrient imbalance, and inadequate micronutrient intake. Supply- and demand-side constraints to healthy diets include food unavailability, poor economic situation, low exposure to nutrition counselling, food restrictions and taboos, adverse family influence and gender norms, and gaps in knowledge. Intervention strategies with potential to improve maternal diets include food-based programs, behavior change communication, and nutrition-sensitive agriculture interventions. However, strategies face implementation bottlenecks and limited effectiveness in real-world at-scale impact evaluations. In conclusion, investments in systems approaches spanning health, nutrition, and agriculture sectors, with evaluation frameworks at subnational levels, are needed to promote healthy diets for women.

Year published

2021

Authors

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Kachwaha, Shivani; Tran, Lan Mai; Sanghvi, Tina; Ghosh, Sebanti; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Kachwaha, Shivani; Tran, Lan Mai; Sanghvi, Tina; Ghosh, Sebanti; Menon, Purnima; et al. 2021. Maternal diets in India: Gaps, barriers, and opportunities. Nutrients 13(10): 3534. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13103534

Country/Region

India; Pakistan; Bangladesh

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Foods; Nutrition; Pregnant Women; Diet; Maternal Nutrition; Women; Food Intake

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Adolescent birth and child undernutrition: An analysis of demographic and health surveys in Bangladesh, 1996–2017

2021Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Scott, Samuel; Khương, Long Quỳnh; Pramanik, Priyanjana; Ahmed, Akhter; Rashid, Sabina Faiz; Afsana, Kaosar; Menon, Purnima

Details

Adolescent birth and child undernutrition: An analysis of demographic and health surveys in Bangladesh, 1996–2017

Adolescent birth is a major global concern owing to its adverse effects on maternal and child health. We assessed trends in adolescent birth and examined its associations with child undernutrition in Bangladesh using data from seven rounds of Demographic and Health Surveys (1996–2017, n = 12,006 primiparous women with living children <5 years old). Adolescent birth (10–19 years old) declined slowly, from 84% in 1996 to 71% in 2017. Compared with adult mothers (≥20 years old), young adolescent mothers (10–15 years old) were more likely to be underweight (+11 pp), have lower education (−24 pp), have less decision-making power (−10 pp), live in poorer households (−0.9 SD) with poorer sanitation (−15 pp), and have poorer feeding practices (10 pp), and were less likely to access health and nutrition services (−3 to −24 pp). In multivariable regressions controlled for known determinants of child undernutrition, children born to adolescents had lower height-for-age Z-scores (−0.29 SD for young and −0.10 SD for old adolescents (16–19 years old)), weight-for-age Z-score (−0.18 and −0.06 SD, respectively) as well as higher stunting (5.9 pp) and underweight (6.0 pp) than those born to adults. In conclusion, birth during adolescence, a common occurrence in Bangladesh, is associated with child undernutrition. Policies and programs to address poverty and improve women's education can help delay marriage, reduce early childbearing, and improve child growth.

Year published

2021

Authors

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Scott, Samuel; Khương, Long Quỳnh; Pramanik, Priyanjana; Ahmed, Akhter; Rashid, Sabina Faiz; Afsana, Kaosar; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Scott, Samuel; Khuong, Long Quynh; Pramanik, Priyanjana; Ahmed, Akhter; Rashid, Sabina Faiz; Afsana, Kaosar; and Menon, Purnima. 2021. Adolescent birth and child undernutrition: An analysis of demographic and health surveys in Bangladesh, 1996–2017. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1500(1): 69-81. https://doi.org/10.1111/nyas.14608

Country/Region

Bangladesh

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Adolescents; Child Nutrition; Pregnant Adolescents; Surveys; Health; Child Health; Stunting; Thinness; Nutrition; Children; Marriage

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Provision and utilisation of health and nutrition services during COVID-19 pandemic in urban Bangladesh

2021Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Sununtnasuk, Celeste; Pant, Anjali; Tran, Lan Mai; Kachwaha, Shivani; Menon, Purnima

Details

Provision and utilisation of health and nutrition services during COVID-19 pandemic in urban Bangladesh

The COVID-19 pandemic is expected to have profound effects on healthcare systems, but little evidence exists on service provision, utilisation, or adaptations. This study aimed to (1) examine the changes to health and nutrition service delivery and utilisation in urban Bangladesh during and after enforcement of COVID-19 restrictions and (2) identify adaptations and potential solutions to strengthen delivery and uptake. We conducted longitudinal surveys with health care providers (n = 45), pregnant women (n = 40), and mothers of children <2 years (n = 387) in February 2020 (in-person) and September 2020 (by phone). We used Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed-rank tests to compare the changes before and during the pandemic. Services delivery for women and children which require proximity were severely affected; weight and height measurements fell by 20–29 percentage points (pp) for pregnant women and 37–57 pp for children, and child immunisations fell by 38 pp. Declines in service utilisation were large, including drops in facility visitations (35 pp among pregnant women and 67 pp among mothers), health and nutrition counselling (up to 73 pp), child weight measurements (50 pp), and immunisations (61 pp). The primary method of adaptation was provision of services over phone (37% for antenatal care services, 44%–49% for counselling). Despite adaptations to service provision, continued availability of routine maternal and child health services did not translate into service utilisation. Further investments are needed to provide timely and accurate information on COVID-19 to the general public, improve COVID-19 training and provide incentives for health care providers and ensure availability of personal protective equipment for providers and beneficiaries.

Year published

2021

Authors

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Sununtnasuk, Celeste; Pant, Anjali; Tran, Lan Mai; Kachwaha, Shivani; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Sununtnasuk, Celeste; Pant, Anjali; Tran, Lan Mai; Kachwaha, Shivani; Menon, Purnima; et al. 2021. Provision and utilisation of health and nutrition services during COVID-19 pandemic in urban Bangladesh. Maternal and Child Nutrition 17(4): e13218. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.13218

Country/Region

Bangladesh

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Covid-19; Health; Urban Areas; Nutrition; Health Services; Pandemics

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Strengthening nutrition interventions in antenatal care services affects dietary intake, micronutrient intake, gestational weight gain, and breastfeeding in Uttar Pradesh, India: Results of a cluster-randomized program evaluation

2021

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Kachwaha, Shivani; Tran, Lan Mai; Avula, Rasmi; Young, Melissa F.; Ghosh, Sebanti; Sharma, Praveen Kumar; Escobar-Alegria, Jessica; Forissier, Thomas; Patil, Sumeet
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Frongillo, Edward A.; Menon, Purnima

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Strengthening nutrition interventions in antenatal care services affects dietary intake, micronutrient intake, gestational weight gain, and breastfeeding in Uttar Pradesh, India: Results of a cluster-randomized program evaluation

Background: Maternal nutrition interventions are inadequately integrated into antenatal care (ANC). Alive & Thrive aimed to strengthen delivery of micronutrient supplements and intensify interpersonal counseling and community mobilization through government ANC services. Objectives: We compared nutrition-intensified ANC (I-ANC) with standard ANC (S-ANC) on coverage of nutrition interventions and maternal nutrition practices. Methods: We used a cluster-randomized design with cross-sectional baseline (2017) and endline (2019) surveys (n ∼660 pregnant and 1800 recently delivered women per survey) and a repeated-measures longitudinal study in 2018–2019 (n = 400). We derived difference-in-difference effect estimates (DIDs) for diet diversity, consumption of micronutrient supplements, weight monitoring, and early breastfeeding practices. Results: Despite substantial secular improvements in service coverage from India's national nutrition program, women in the I-ANC arm received more home visits [DID: 7–14 percentage points (pp)] and counseling on core nutrition messages (DID: 10–23 pp) than in the S-ANC arm. One-third of women got ≥3 home visits and one-fourth received ≥4 ANC check-ups in the I-ANC arm. Improvements were greater in the I-ANC arm than in the S-ANC arm for any receipt and consumption of iron–folic acid (DID: 7.5 pp and 9.5 pp, respectively) and calcium supplements (DID: 14.1 pp and 11.5 pp, respectively). Exclusive breastfeeding improved (DID: 7.5 pp) but early initiation of breastfeeding did not. Maternal food group consumption (∼4 food groups) and probability of adequacy of micronutrients (∼20%) remained low in both arms. Repeated-measures longitudinal analyses showed similar results, with additional impact on consumption of vitamin A–rich foods (10 pp, 11 g/d), other vegetables and fruits (22–29 g/d), and gestational weight gain (0.4 kg). Conclusions: Intensifying nutrition in government ANC services improved maternal nutrition practices even with strong secular trends in service coverage. Dietary diversity, supplement consumption, and breastfeeding practices remained suboptimal. Achieving greater behavior changes will require strengthening the delivery and use of maternal nutrition services integrated into ANC services in the health system. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT03378141.

Year published

2021

Authors

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Kachwaha, Shivani; Tran, Lan Mai; Avula, Rasmi; Young, Melissa F.; Ghosh, Sebanti; Sharma, Praveen Kumar; Escobar-Alegria, Jessica; Forissier, Thomas; Patil, Sumeet; Frongillo, Edward A.; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Kachwaha, Shivani; Tran, Lan Mai; Avula, Rasmi; Young, Melissa; Ghosh, Sebanti; Sharma, Praveen K.; Escobar-Alegria, Jessica; Forissier, Thomas; Patil, Sumeet; Frongillo, Edward A.; and Menon, Purnima. 2021. Strengthening nutrition interventions in antenatal care services affects dietary intake, micronutrient intake, gestational weight gain, and breastfeeding in Uttar Pradesh, India: Results of a cluster-randomized program evaluation. Journal of Nutrition 151(8): 2282–2295. https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/nxab131

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Maternal and Child Health; Child Nutrition; Weight Gain; Malnutrition; Nutrition; Trace Elements; Psychology; Diet; Breastfeeding; Maternal Nutrition; Food Intake

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Stories of change in nutrition from Africa and Asia: An introduction to a special series in food security

2021Gillespie, Stuart; Harris, Jody; Nisbett, Nicholas; van den Bold, Mara

Details

Stories of change in nutrition from Africa and Asia: An introduction to a special series in food security

Malnutrition in all its forms continues to be a massive global challenge, and the past decade has seen a growing political attention to addressing malnutrition in different contexts. What has been largely missing so far, and is in growing demand from countries, is tangible, practical and rigorous insights and lessons (from other countries or contexts) on how to translate this burgeoning political momentum into effective policies and programme implementation strategies – and ultimately impact on the ground. This new climate of learning from experience and evidence led to the launch in 2015 of the Stories of Change initiative. This series presents a second wave of studies from six countries (Tanzania, Rwanda, Vietnam, Ghana, Burkina Faso, Nigeria,) and three Indian states (Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu). These provide clear evidence combined with compelling narratives on what drives success in addressing all forms of malnutrition – evidence that is necessary for turning global momentum into actual results on the ground. This introductory Opinion is published with the first set of papers. It will be followed by a thorough synthesis of papers as a conclusion of the Series. We hope that the lessons embedded in these Stories of Change will inform and inspire the deliberations and outcomes of the UN Food Systems Summit and the second Nutrition for Growth Summit to be held this year, and the actions of those in the global food and nutrition system working for positive change.

Year published

2021

Authors

Gillespie, Stuart; Harris, Jody; Nisbett, Nicholas; van den Bold, Mara

Citation

Gillespie, Stuart; Harris, Jody; Nisbett, Nicholas; and van den Bold, Mara. 2021. Stories of change in nutrition from Africa and Asia: An introduction to a special series in food security. Food Security 13(4): 799–802. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12571-021-01166-8

Country/Region

India; Rwanda; Vietnam; Ghana; Burkina Faso; Nigeria

Keywords

Tanzania; Western Africa; South-eastern Asia; Southern Asia; Sub-saharan Africa; Africa; Eastern Africa; Asia; Middle Africa; Policies; Food Policies; Malnutrition; Nutrition; Systems Analysis; Food Security

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

COVID-19 disrupted provision and utilization of health and nutrition services in Uttar Pradesh, India: Insights from service providers, household phone surveys, and administrative data

2021

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Kachwaha, Shivani; Pant, Anjali; Tran, Lan Mai; Walia, Monika; Ghosh, Sebanti; Sharma, Praveen Kumar; Escobar-Alegria, Jessica; Frongillo, Edward A.; Menon, Purnima
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Avula, Rasmi

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COVID-19 disrupted provision and utilization of health and nutrition services in Uttar Pradesh, India: Insights from service providers, household phone surveys, and administrative data

Background: The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic may substantially affect health systems, but little primary evidence is available on disruption of health and nutrition services. Objectives: This study aimed to 1) determine the extent of disruption in provision and utilization of health and nutrition services induced by the pandemic in Uttar Pradesh, India; and 2) identify how adaptations were made to restore service provision in response to the pandemic. Methods: We conducted longitudinal surveys with frontline workers (FLWs, n = 313) and mothers of children <2 y old (n = 659) in December 2019 (in-person) and July 2020 (by phone). We also interviewed block-level managers and obtained administrative data. We examined changes in service provision and utilization using Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed-rank tests. Results: Compared with prepandemic, service provision reduced substantially during lockdown (83–98 percentage points, pp), except for home visits and take-home rations (∼30%). Most FLWs (68%–90%) restored service provision in July 2020, except for immunization and hot cooked meals (<10%). Administrative data showed similar patterns of disruption and restoration. FLW fears, increased workload, inadequate personal protective equipment (PPE), and manpower shortages challenged service provision. Key adaptations made to provide services were delivering services to beneficiary homes (∼40%–90%), social distancing (80%), and using PPE (40%–50%) and telephones for communication (∼20%). On the demand side, service utilization reduced substantially (40–80 pp) during the lockdown, but about half of mothers received home visits and food supplementation. Utilization for most services did not improve after the lockdown, bearing the challenges of limited travel (30%), nonavailability of services (26%), and fear of catching the virus when leaving the house (22%) or meeting service providers (14%). Conclusions: COVID-19 disrupted the provision and use of health and nutrition services in Uttar Pradesh, India, despite adaptations to restore services. Strengthening logistical support, capacity enhancement, performance management, and demand creation are needed to improve service provision and utilization during and post-COVID-19.

Year published

2021

Authors

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Kachwaha, Shivani; Pant, Anjali; Tran, Lan Mai; Walia, Monika; Ghosh, Sebanti; Sharma, Praveen Kumar; Escobar-Alegria, Jessica; Frongillo, Edward A.; Menon, Purnima; Avula, Rasmi

Citation

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Kachwaha, Shivani; Pant, Anjali; Tran, Lan M.; Walia, Monika; Ghosh, Sebanti; Sharma, Praveen K.; Escobar-Alegria, Jessica; Frongillo, Edward A.; Menon, Purnima; and Avula, Rasmi. 2021. COVID-19 disrupted provision and utilization of health and nutrition services in Uttar Pradesh, India: Insights from service providers, household phone surveys, and administrative data. Journal of Nutrition 151(8): 2305–2316. https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/nxab135

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Data; Surveys; Covid-19; Health; Households; Nutrition; Health Services

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Intergenerational nutrition benefits of India’s national school feeding program

2021Chakrabarti, Suman; Scott, Samuel; Alderman, Harold; Menon, Purnima; Gilligan, Daniel O.

Details

Intergenerational nutrition benefits of India’s national school feeding program

India has the world’s highest number of undernourished children and the largest school feeding program, the Mid-Day Meal (MDM) scheme. As school feeding programs target children outside the highest-return “first 1000-days” window, they have not been included in the global agenda to address stunting. School meals benefit education and nutrition in participants, but no studies have examined whether benefits carry over to their children. Using nationally representative data on mothers and their children spanning 1993 to 2016, we assess whether MDM supports intergenerational improvements in child linear growth. Here we report that height-for-age z-score (HAZ) among children born to mothers with full MDM exposure was greater (+0.40 SD) than that in children born to non-exposed mothers. Associations were stronger in low socioeconomic strata and likely work through women’s education, fertility, and health service utilization. MDM was associated with 13–32% of the HAZ improvement in India from 2006 to 2016.

Year published

2021

Authors

Chakrabarti, Suman; Scott, Samuel; Alderman, Harold; Menon, Purnima; Gilligan, Daniel O.

Citation

Chakrabarti, Suman; Scott, Samuel; Alderman, Harold; Menon, Purnima; and Gilligan, Daniel O. 2021. Intergenerational nutrition benefits of India’s national school feeding program. Nature Communications 12: 4248. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-24433-w

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Child Nutrition; School Feeding; Stunting; Schoolchildren; Nutrition; Children

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Understanding implementation and improving nutrition interventions: Barriers and facilitators of using data strategically to inform the implementation of maternal nutrition in Uttar Pradesh, India

2021Young, Melissa F.; Bootwala, Ahad; Kachwaha, Shivani; Avula, Rasmi; Ghosh, Sebanti; Sharma, Praveen Kumar; Shastri, Vishal Dev; Forissier, Thomas; Menon, Purnima; Nguyen, Phuong Hong

Details

Understanding implementation and improving nutrition interventions: Barriers and facilitators of using data strategically to inform the implementation of maternal nutrition in Uttar Pradesh, India

Background: In response to the high levels of maternal nutrition in Uttar Pradesh, Alive & Thrive (A&T) aimed to strengthen the delivery of nutrition interventions through the government antenatal care platform, including leveraging ongoing data collection to improve program delivery and reach (clinicaltrials.gov NCT03378141). However, we have a limited understanding of providers’ experiences and challenges of collecting and using data for decision making. Objective: To identify barriers and facilitators to the 1) collection of data and 2) use of data for decision-making. Methods: In-depth interviews (N = 35) were conducted among block-level government staff, frontline worker (FLW) supervisors and A&T staff in two districts in Uttar Pradesh. Systematic coding of verbatim transcripts and detailed summaries were undertaken to elucidate themes related to data collection and use. FLW supervisors (N = 103) were surveyed to assess data use experiences. Results: Data were used to understand the reach of maternal nutrition services, estimate the demand for supplements and guide identification of areas of low FLW performance. About half of supervisors reported using data to identify areas of improvement; however, only 23% reported using data to inform decision-making. Facilitators of data collection and use included collaboration between health department officials, perceived importance of block ranking and monthly review meetings with staff and supervisors to review and discuss data. Barriers to data collection and use included human resource gaps, inadequate technology infrastructure, FLW education level, political structure and lack of cooperation between FLWs and supervisors. Conclusions: Use of data for decision-making is critical for supporting intervention planning and providing targeted supervision and support for FLWs. Despite intensive data collection efforts, the use of data to inform decision-making remains limited. Collaboration facilitated data collection and use, but structural barriers such as staff vacancies need to be addressed to improve the implementation of maternal nutrition interventions.

Year published

2021

Authors

Young, Melissa F.; Bootwala, Ahad; Kachwaha, Shivani; Avula, Rasmi; Ghosh, Sebanti; Sharma, Praveen Kumar; Shastri, Vishal Dev; Forissier, Thomas; Menon, Purnima; Nguyen, Phuong Hong

Citation

Young, Melissa F.; Bootwala, Ahad; Kachwaha, Shivani; Avula, Rasmi; Ghosh, Sebanti; Sharma, Praveen Kumar; Shastri, Vishal Dev; Forissier, Thomas; Menon, Purnima; and Nguyen, Phuong Hong. 2021. Understanding implementation and improving nutrition interventions: Barriers and facilitators of using data strategically to inform the implementation of maternal nutrition in Uttar Pradesh, India. Current Developments in Nutrition 5(6): nzab081. https://doi.org/10.1093/cdn/nzab081

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Data; Research; Nutrition; Decision Making; Qualitative Analysis; Maternal Nutrition

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Trends and geographic variability in gender inequalities in child mortality and stunting in India, 2006–2016

2021Alderman, Harold; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Tran, Lan Mai; Menon, Purnima

Details

Trends and geographic variability in gender inequalities in child mortality and stunting in India, 2006–2016

Gender disparities in child undernutrition and mortality in India have been a topic of interest for a long time, but little is known on trends or geographic variability in recent periods. We examined the degree to which historic patterns in gender disparities in child undernutrition and mortality in India have persisted given recent progress in health and nutrition. Using two nationally representative datasets from India between 2006 and 2016, we estimated mortality rates and stunting by gender and by birth order among children under 5 years old. We then tested for differences between boys and girls within each survey round for both national and state levels using bootstrapped standard errors, controlling for cluster and sampling weights. We found striking progress in child mortality and stunting in India between 2006 and 2016 for both boys and girls. Boys were more likely to die than girls during the first year of life. Girls had a higher risk of mortality between age 1 and 5 years than boys in 2006, but the improvements in survival eliminated this gender gap in 2016. For stunting, we found no gender difference in 2006, but girls had higher height‐for‐age Z‐scores (HAZ) and lower stunting than boys in 2016. Trends in gender gaps in mortality and stunting vary substantially by birth order and between states. Our findings indicate that improvements in mortality and nutritional status among girls have started to close gender disparities. efforts to close gaps must stay the course in states that have made progress and be accelerated in states where disparities are still prominent.

Year published

2021

Authors

Alderman, Harold; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Tran, Lan Mai; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Alderman, Harold; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Tran, Lan Mai; and Menon, Purnima. 2021. Trends and geographic variability in gender inequalities in child mortality and stunting in India, 2006–2016. Maternal and Child Nutrition 17(3): e13179. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.13179

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Gender; Gender Equality; Covid-19; Boys; Girls; Stunting; Human Nutrition; Mortality; Equality

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Supporting efforts to address malnutrition in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic in India: An emergency need

2021Menon, Purnima; de Wagt, Arjan; Reddy, Vignesh; Reddy, Kartheek; Pandav, Chandrakant Sambhaji; Avula, Rasmi; Mathews, Pratima

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Supporting efforts to address malnutrition in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic in India: An emergency need

India has been on a steady march to address malnutrition in the last decade. The nutrition community has worked on building consensus on key actions, implementation platforms were put in place and financing for nutrition slowly increased. Under the strong leadership of the Prime Minister, a revolutionary program to address malnutrition was launched in 2018. As actions under the mission accelerated, the COVID-19 pandemic arrived in early 2020. Affecting health systems, food systems, nutrition programs, social safety nets, and the economy, the pandemic has the potential to exacerbate the challenge of malnutrition in multiple ways. India can mitigate some of the possible ways in which COVID-19 will affect malnutrition but will require strong leadership and continued commitment, adaptation of the national nutrition mission, strengthening of the social safety net and innovative evidence-based data to take informed decisions, implement them and ensure feedback to take necessary corrective action. In this article, we outline some challenges and key areas for action. We conclude that India's nutrition journey is too important to be derailed by a crisis like COVID-19. This is a clarion call for the nutrition community in India to rally strongly to support continued attention to malnutrition in all its forms, to generate relevant evidence, and to support and engage all of society to urgently and adequately address malnutrition in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. We have come too far to turn back now.

Year published

2021

Authors

Menon, Purnima; de Wagt, Arjan; Reddy, Vignesh; Reddy, Kartheek; Pandav, Chandrakant Sambhaji; Avula, Rasmi; Mathews, Pratima

Citation

Menon, Purnima; de Wagt, Arjan; Reddy, Vignesh; Reddy, Kartheek; Pandav, Chandrakant Sambhaji; Avula, Rasmi; Mathews, Pratima; et al. 2021. Supporting efforts to address malnutrition in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic in India: An emergency need. Medical Journal of Dr. D. Y. Patil Vidyapeeth 14(4): 369-373. https://doi.org/10.4103/mjdrdypu.mjdrdypu_338_21

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Covid-19; Anganwadi; Malnutrition; Nutrition; Physical Distancing; Pandemics

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Assessing the performance of the Caregiver Reported Early Development Instruments (CREDI) in rural India

2021Alderman, Harold; Friedman, Jed; Ganga, Paula; Kak, Mohini; Rubio‐Codina, Marta

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Assessing the performance of the Caregiver Reported Early Development Instruments (CREDI) in rural India

Although many education and health programs aim to improve early childhood development, it is challenging to assess developmental levels of infants and small children through large household surveys. The Caregiver Reported Early Development Instruments (CREDI) has been proposed as an adaptable, practical, and low‐cost instrument for measuring the developmental status of children under 3 years of age at scale, as it is relatively short and collected by caregiver report. This study employed the CREDI to measure the development of a sample of 994 children ages 22–35 months in rural India and compared the results to those obtained using the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development (Bayley‐III), a reliable and widely used instrument, albeit one not always suited to large‐scale data collection efforts given its length, cost, and complexity of administration. The CREDI validation exercise showed that caregivers can provide assessments in keeping with the more interactive (hence more time‐consuming and training‐intensive) Bayley‐III instrument. Noteworthy, there was no indication that concordance of the instruments differed by education of the caregiver. This is important as it points to alternate feasible tools to measure child development outcomes through large‐scale surveys.

Year published

2021

Authors

Alderman, Harold; Friedman, Jed; Ganga, Paula; Kak, Mohini; Rubio‐Codina, Marta

Citation

Alderman, Harold; Friedman, Jed; Ganga, Paula; Kak, Mohini; and Rubio‐Codina, Marta. 2021. Assessing the performance of the Caregiver Reported Early Development Instruments (CREDI) in rural India. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1492(1): 58-72. https://doi.org/10.1111/nyas.14543

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Assessments; Education; Care Work; Less Favoured Areas; Child Development; Surveys; Childhood Development; Households; Concurrent Validity; Children; Rural Areas

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Mobilising evidence, data, and resources to achieve global maternal and child undernutrition targets and the Sustainable Development Goals: An agenda for action

2021Heidkamp, Rebecca A.; Piwoz, Ellen G.; Gillespie, Stuart; Keats, Emily C.; D'Alimonte, Mary R.; Menon, Purnima; Ruel, Marie T.

Details

Mobilising evidence, data, and resources to achieve global maternal and child undernutrition targets and the Sustainable Development Goals: An agenda for action

Year published

2021

Authors

Heidkamp, Rebecca A.; Piwoz, Ellen G.; Gillespie, Stuart; Keats, Emily C.; D'Alimonte, Mary R.; Menon, Purnima; Ruel, Marie T.

Citation

Heidkamp, Rebecca A.; Piwoz, Ellen G.; Gillespie, Stuart; Keats, Emily C.; D'Alimonte, Mary R.; Menon, Purnima; Ruel, Marie T.; et al. 2021. Mobilising evidence, data, and resources to achieve global maternal and child undernutrition targets and the Sustainable Development Goals: An agenda for action. Lancet 397(10282): 1400-1418. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(21)00568-7

Keywords

Health Systems; Child Nutrition; Sustainable Development Goals; Pregnancy; Covid-19; Health; Agriculture; Malnutrition; Nutrition; Pregnant Women; Trace Elements; Hygiene; Diet; Maternal Nutrition

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Impact of COVID-19 on household food insecurity and interlinkages with child feeding practices and coping strategies in Uttar Pradesh, India: A longitudinal community-based study

2021Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Kachwaha, Shivani; Pant, Anjali; Tran, Lan Mai; Ghosh, Sebanti; Avula, Rasmi; Menon, Purnima

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Impact of COVID-19 on household food insecurity and interlinkages with child feeding practices and coping strategies in Uttar Pradesh, India: A longitudinal community-based study

Objectives: The COVID-19 pandemic has profound negative impacts on people’s lives, but little is known on its effect on household food insecurity (HFI) in poor setting resources. This study assessed changes in HFI during the pandemic and examined the interlinkages between HFI with child feeding practices and coping strategies. Design: A longitudinal survey in December 2019 (in-person) and August 2020 (by phone). Setting: Community-based individuals from 26 blocks in 2 districts in Uttar Pradesh, India. Participants: Mothers with children <2 years (n=569). Main outcomes and analyses: We measured HFI by using the HFI Access Scale and examined the changes in HFI during the pandemic using the Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed-rank tests. We then assessed child feeding practices and coping strategies by HFI status using multivariable regression models. Results: HFI increased sharply from 21% in December 2019 to 80% in August 2020, with 62% households changing the status from food secure to insecure over this period. Children in newly or consistently food-insecure households were less likely to consume a diverse diet (adjusted OR, AOR 0.57, 95% CI 0.34 to 0.95 and AOR 0.51, 95% CI 0.23 to 1.12, respectively) compared with those in food-secure households. Households with consistent food insecurity were more likely to engage in coping strategies such as reducing other essential non-food expenditures (AOR 2.2, 95% CI 1.09 to 4.24), borrowing money to buy food (AOR 4.3, 95% CI 2.31 to 7.95) or selling jewellery (AOR 5.0, 95% CI 1.74 to 14.27) to obtain foods. Similar findings were observed for newly food-insecure households. Conclusions: The COVID-19 pandemic and its lockdown measures posed a significant risk to HFI which in turn had implications for child feeding practices and coping strategies. Our findings highlight the need for further investment in targeted social protection strategies and safety nets as part of multisectoral solutions to improve HFI during and after COVID-19.

Year published

2021

Authors

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Kachwaha, Shivani; Pant, Anjali; Tran, Lan Mai; Ghosh, Sebanti; Avula, Rasmi; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Kachwaha, Shivani; Pant, Anjali; Tran, Lan M.; Ghosh, Sebanti; Avula, Rasmi; Menon, Purnima; et al. 2021. Impact of COVID-19 on household food insecurity and interlinkages with child feeding practices and coping strategies in Uttar Pradesh, India: a longitudinal community-based study. BMJ Open 11(4): e048738. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-048738

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Maternal and Child Health; Child Nutrition; Covid-19; Health; Households; Nutrition; Child Feeding; Children; Food Security; Maternal Nutrition

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Missed opportunities for delivering nutrition interventions in first 1000 days of life in India: Insights from the National Family Health Survey, 2006 and 2016

2021Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Avula, Rasmi; Tran, Lan Mai; Sethi, Vani; Kumar, Alok; Baswal, Dinesh; Hajeebhoy, Nemat; Ranjan, Alok; Menon, Purnima

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Missed opportunities for delivering nutrition interventions in first 1000 days of life in India: Insights from the National Family Health Survey, 2006 and 2016

Existing health and community nutrition systems have the potential to deliver many nutrition interventions. However, the coverage of nutrition interventions across the delivery platforms of these systems has not been uniform. We (1) examined the opportunity gaps between delivery platforms and corresponding nutrition interventions through the continuum of care in India between 2006 and 2016 and and (2) assessed inequalities in these opportunity gaps.

Year published

2021

Authors

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Avula, Rasmi; Tran, Lan Mai; Sethi, Vani; Kumar, Alok; Baswal, Dinesh; Hajeebhoy, Nemat; Ranjan, Alok; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Avula, Rasmi; Tran, Lan Mai; Sethi, Vani; Kumar, Alok; Baswal, Dinesh; Hajeebhoy, Nemat; Ranjan, Alok; and Menon, Purnima. 2021. Missed opportunities for delivering nutrition interventions in first 1000 days of life in India: Insights from the National Family Health Survey, 2006 and 2016. BMJ Global Health 6(2): e003717. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2020-003717

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Maternal and Child Health; Health Intervention; Child Nutrition; Surveys; Policies; Health; Nutrition; Food Supplementation; Trace Elements; Maternal Nutrition; Health Care

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

The double burden of malnutrition in India: Trends and inequalities (2006–2016)

2021Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Scott, Samuel; Headey, Derek D.; Singh, Nishmeet; Tran, Lan Mai; Menon, Purnima; Ruel, Marie T.

Details

The double burden of malnutrition in India: Trends and inequalities (2006–2016)

Rapid urban expansion has important health implications. This study examines trends and inequalities in undernutrition and overnutrition by gender, residence (rural, urban slum, urban non-slum), and wealth among children and adults in India. We used National Family Health Survey data from 2006 and 2016 (n = 311,182 children 0-5y and 972,192 adults 15-54y in total). We calculated differences, slope index of inequality (SII) and concentration index to examine changes over time and inequalities in outcomes by gender, residence, and wealth quintile. Between 2006 and 2016, child stunting prevalence dropped from 48% to 38%, with no gender differences in trends, whereas child overweight/obesity remained at ~7–8%. In both years, stunting prevalence was higher in rural and urban slum households compared to urban non-slum households. Within-residence, wealth inequalities were large for stunting (SII: -33 to -19 percentage points, pp) and declined over time only in urban non-slum households. Among adults, underweight prevalence decreased by ~13 pp but overweight/obesity doubled (10% to 21%) between 2006 and 2016. Rises in overweight/obesity among women were greater in rural and urban slum than urban non-slum households. Within-residence, wealth inequalities were large for both underweight (SII -35 to -12pp) and overweight/obesity (+16 to +29pp) for adults, with the former being more concentrated among poorer households and the latter among wealthier households. In conclusion, India experienced a rapid decline in child and adult undernutrition between 2006 and 2016 across genders and areas of residence. Of great concern, however, is the doubling of adult overweight/obesity in all areas during this period and the rise in wealth inequalities in both rural and urban slum households. With the second largest urban population globally, India needs to aggressively tackle the multiple burdens of malnutrition, especially among rural and urban slum households and develop actions to maintain trends in undernutrition reduction without exacerbating the rapidly rising problems of overweight/obesity.

Year published

2021

Authors

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Scott, Samuel; Headey, Derek D.; Singh, Nishmeet; Tran, Lan Mai; Menon, Purnima; Ruel, Marie T.

Citation

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Scott, Samuel; Headey, Derek D.; Singh, Nishmeet; Tran, Lan Mai; Menon, Purnima; and Ruel, Marie T. 2021. The double burden of malnutrition in India: Trends and inequalities (2006–2016). PLoS ONE 16(2): e0247856. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0247856

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Maternal and Child Health; Gender; Health; Boys; Girls; Capacity Development; Thinness; Malnutrition; Nutrition; Children; Men; Diet; Obesity; Women

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Effective coverage of nutrition interventions across the continuum of care in Bangladesh: Insights from nationwide cross-sectional household and health facility surveys

2021Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Khương, Long Quỳnh; Pramanik, Priyanjana; Billah, Sk Masum; Menon, Purnima; Piwoz, Ellen; Leslie, Hannah H.

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Effective coverage of nutrition interventions across the continuum of care in Bangladesh: Insights from nationwide cross-sectional household and health facility surveys

Improving the impact of nutrition interventions requires adequate measurement of both reach and quality of interventions, but limited evidence exists on advancing coverage measurement. We adjusted contact-based coverage estimates, taking into consideration the inputs required to deliver quality nutrition services, to calculate input-adjusted coverage of nutrition interventions across the continuum of care from pregnancy through early childhood in Bangladesh.

Year published

2021

Authors

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Khương, Long Quỳnh; Pramanik, Priyanjana; Billah, Sk Masum; Menon, Purnima; Piwoz, Ellen; Leslie, Hannah H.

Citation

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Khương, Long Quỳnh; Pramanik, Priyanjana; Billah, Sk Masum; Menon, Purnima; Piwoz, Ellen; and Leslie, Hannah H. 2021. Effective coverage of nutrition interventions across the continuum of care in Bangladesh: Insights from nationwide cross-sectional household and health facility surveys. BMJ Open 11(1): e04010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-040109

Country/Region

Bangladesh

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Maternal and Child Health; Pregnancy; Surveys; Health; Households; Nutrition

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Factors influencing the performance of community health workers: A qualitative study of Anganwadi workers from Bihar, India

2020John, Aparna; Nisbett, Nicholas; Barnett, Inka; Avula, Rasmi; Menon, Purnima

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Factors influencing the performance of community health workers: A qualitative study of Anganwadi workers from Bihar, India

Globally, there remain significant knowledge and evidence gaps around how to support Community Health Worker (CHW) programmes to achieve high coverage and quality of interventions. India’s Integrated Child Development Services scheme employs the largest CHW cadre in the world—Anganwadi Workers (AWWs). However, factors influencing the performance of these workers remain under researched. Lessons from it have potential to impact on other large scale global CHW programmes. A qualitative study of AWWs in the Indian state of Bihar was conducted to identify key drivers of performance in 2015. In-depth interviews were conducted with 30 AWWs; data was analysed using both inductive and deductive thematic analysis. The study adapted and contextualised existing frameworks on CHW performance, finding that factors affecting performance occur at the individual, community, programme and organisational levels, including factors not previously identified in the literature. Individual factors include initial financial motives and family support; programme factors include beneficiaries’ and AWWs’ service preferences and work environment; community factors include caste dynamics and community and seasonal migration; and organisational factors include corruption. The initial motives of the worker (the need to retain a job for family financial needs) and community expectations (for product-oriented services) ensure continued efforts even when her motivation is low. The main constraints to performance remain factors outside of her control, including limited availability of programme resources and challenging relationships shaped by caste dynamics, seasonal migration, and corruption. Programme efforts to improve performance (such as incentives, working conditions and supportive management) need to consider these complex, inter-related multiple determinants of performance. Our findings, including new factors, contribute to the global literature on factors affecting the performance of CHWs and have wide application.

Year published

2020

Authors

John, Aparna; Nisbett, Nicholas; Barnett, Inka; Avula, Rasmi; Menon, Purnima

Citation

John, Aparna; Nisbett, Nicholas; Barnett, Inka; Avula, Rasmi; and Menon, Purnima. 2020. Factors influencing the performance of community health workers: A qualitative study of Anganwadi workers from Bihar, India. PLoS ONE 15(11): e024246. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242460

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Health

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Demographic, nutritional, social and environmental predictors of learning skills and depression in 20,000 Indian adolescents: Findings from the UDAYA survey

2020Scott, Samuel; Pant, Anjali; Nguyen, Phuong; Shinde, Sachin; Menon, Purnima

Details

Demographic, nutritional, social and environmental predictors of learning skills and depression in 20,000 Indian adolescents: Findings from the UDAYA survey

Adolescent wellbeing is critical to breaking the intergenerational cycle of poverty and one in five of the world’s adolescents live in India. We explored predictors of learning skills and depression in Indian adolescents.

Year published

2020

Authors

Scott, Samuel; Pant, Anjali; Nguyen, Phuong; Shinde, Sachin; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Scott, Samuel; Pant, Anjali; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Shinde, Sachin; and Menon, Purnima. 2020. Demographic, nutritional, social and environmental predictors of learning skills and depression in 20, 000 Indian adolescents: Findings from the UDAYA survey. PLoS ONE 15(10): e0240843. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0240843

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Adolescents; Environmental Factors; Mental Health; Learning Capacity; Surveys; Health; Learning; Nutrition; Demography

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

The role of the state government, civil society and programmes across sectors in stunting reduction in Chhattisgarh, India, 2006–2016

2020Kohli, Neha; Nguyen, Phuong; Avula, Rasmi; Menon, Purnima

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The role of the state government, civil society and programmes across sectors in stunting reduction in Chhattisgarh, India, 2006–2016

Childhood stunting has declined in India between 2006 and 2016, but not uniformly across all states. Little is known about what helped some states accelerate progress while others did not. Insights on subnational drivers of progress are useful not just for India but for other decentralised policy contexts. Thus, we aimed to identify the factors that contributed to declines in childhood stunting (from 52.9% to 37.6%) between 2006 and 2016 in the state of Chhattisgarh, a subnational success story in stunting reduction in India.

Year published

2020

Authors

Kohli, Neha; Nguyen, Phuong; Avula, Rasmi; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Kohli, Neha; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Avula, Rasmi; and Menon, Purnima. 2020. The role of the state government, civil society and programmes across sectors in stunting reduction in Chhattisgarh, India, 2006–2016. BMJ Global Health 5(7): e00227. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2019-002274

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Maternal and Child Health; Mixed Methods; Child Nutrition; Programmes; Body Mass Index; Policies; Health; Nutrition Policies; Stakeholders; Stunting; Nutrition; Health Services; Governance

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Effect of differences in month and location of measurement in estimating prevalence and trend of wasting and stunting in India in 2005-2006 and 2015-2016

2020Madan, Emily M.; Frongillo, Edward A.; Unisa, Sayeed; Dwivedi, Laxmikant; Johnston, Robert; Menon, Purnima; Nguyen, Phuong

Details

Effect of differences in month and location of measurement in estimating prevalence and trend of wasting and stunting in India in 2005-2006 and 2015-2016

Child undernutrition in India remains widespread. Data from the National Family Health Survey (NFHS-3 and NFHS-4) suggest that wasting prevalence has increased while stunting prevalence has declined. The objectives of this study were to 1) describe wasting and stunting by month of measurement in India in children < 5 years of age in NFHS-3 and NFHS-4 surveys, and 2) test whether differences in the timing of anthropometric data collection and in states between survey years introduced bias in the comparison of estimates of wasting and stunting between NFHS-3 and NFHS-4. Data on wasting and stunting for 42,608 and 232,744 children under five years in the NFHS-3 and NFHS-4 survey rounds were analysed. Differences in the prevalence of wasting and stunting by month of year and by state were examined descriptively. Regression analyses were conducted to test the sensitivity of the estimate of differences in wasting and stunting prevalence across survey years to both state differences and seasonality. Examination of the patterns of wasting and stunting by month of measurement and by state across survey years reveal marked variability. When both state and month were adjusted, regardless of the method used to account for sample size, there was a small negative difference from 2005–06 to 2015–16 in the prevalence of wasting (-0.8 ± 0.6 percentage points; p = 0.2) and a negative difference in stunting prevalence (-8.3 ± 0.7 percentage points; p < 0.001), indicating a small bias for wasting but not for stunting in unadjusted analyses. State and seasonal differences may have introduced bias to the estimated difference in prevalence of wasting between the survey years but did not do so for stunting. Future data collection should be designed to maximize consistency in coverage of both time and place.

Year published

2020

Authors

Madan, Emily M.; Frongillo, Edward A.; Unisa, Sayeed; Dwivedi, Laxmikant; Johnston, Robert; Menon, Purnima; Nguyen, Phuong

Citation

Madan, Emily M.; Frongillo, Edward A.; Unisa, Sayeed; Dwivedi, Laxmikant; Johnston, Robert; Menon, Purnima; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; et al. 2020. Effect of differences in month and location of measurement in estimating prevalence and trend of wasting and stunting in India in 2005-2006 and 2015-2016. Current Developments in Nutrition 4(6): nzaa092. https://doi.org/10.1093/cdn/nzaa092

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Child Nutrition; Stunting; Malnutrition; Nutrition; Wasting Disease (nutritional Disorder); Seasonality

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

A double edged sword? Improvements in economic conditions over a decade in India led to declines in undernutrition as well as increases in overweight among adolescents and women

2020Young, Melissa F.; Nguyen, Phuong; Tran, Lan Mai; Avula, Rasmi; Menon, Purnima

Details

A double edged sword? Improvements in economic conditions over a decade in India led to declines in undernutrition as well as increases in overweight among adolescents and women

This study examined the national and state trends for BMI and identified the determinants of underweight and overweight/obesity among adolescent girls and women.

Year published

2020

Authors

Young, Melissa F.; Nguyen, Phuong; Tran, Lan Mai; Avula, Rasmi; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Young, Melissa; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Tran, Lan Mai; Avula, Rasmi; and Menon, Purnima. 2020. A double edged sword? Improvements in economic conditions over a decade in India led to declines in undernutrition as well as increases in overweight among adolescents and women. Journal of Nutrition 150(2): 364-372. https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/nxz251

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Adolescents; Body Mass Index; Malnutrition; Nutrition; Overweight; Obesity; Women

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Assessing the economic feasibility of assuring nutritionally adequate diets for vulnerable populations in Uttar Pradesh, India: Key findings from ‘cost of the diet’ analysis (OR21-05-19)

2019Kachwaha, Shivani; Nguyen, Phuong; Defreese, Michelle; Cyriac, Shruthi; Girard, Aimee Webb; Avula, Rasmi; Menon, Purnima

Details

Assessing the economic feasibility of assuring nutritionally adequate diets for vulnerable populations in Uttar Pradesh, India: Key findings from ‘cost of the diet’ analysis (OR21-05-19)

Uttar Pradesh (UP) is the most populous state with the highest burden of undernutrition in India. Alive & Thrive is working to strengthen behavior change communication (BCC) on diet diversity and quantity, using health systems platforms to deliver maternal nutrition intervention. However, evidence on the accessibility and affordability associated with recommended diets is limited. This study aims to: 1) examine the costs of nutritious foods in local markets, 2) identify inexpensive sources of essential micronutrients which could be promoted through BCC interventions.

Year published

2019

Authors

Kachwaha, Shivani; Nguyen, Phuong; Defreese, Michelle; Cyriac, Shruthi; Girard, Aimee Webb; Avula, Rasmi; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Kachwaha, Shivani; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Defreese, Michelle; Cyriac, Shruthi; Girard, Aimee Webb; Avula, Rasmi; and Menon, Purnima. 2019. Assessing the economic feasibility of assuring nutritionally adequate diets for vulnerable populations in Uttar Pradesh, India: Key findings from ‘cost of the diet’ analysis (OR21-05-19). Current Developments in Nutrition 3(Supplement 1): 749. https://doi.org/10.1093/cdn/nzz034.OR21-05-19

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Economic Viability; Behavioural Sciences; Nutrient Intake; Malnutrition; Nutrition; Vitamins; Food Prices; Diet; Communication; Dietary Diversity

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-NC-ND-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Progress in reducing child mortality and stunting in India: An application of the Lives Saved Tool

2019Alderman, Harold; Nguyen, Phuong; Menon, Purnima

Details

Progress in reducing child mortality and stunting in India: An application of the Lives Saved Tool

The Lives Saved Tool (LiST) has been used to estimate the impact of scaling up intervention coverage on undernutrition and mortality. Evidence for the model is largely based on efficacy trials, raising concerns of applicability to large-scale contexts. We modelled the impact of scaling up health programs in India between 2006 and 2016 and compared estimates to observed changes. Demographics, intervention coverage and nutritional status were obtained from National Family and Health Survey 2005–6 (NFHS-3) for the base year and NHFS-4 2015–16 for the endline. We used the LiST to estimate the impact of changes in coverage of interventions over this decade on child mortality and undernutrition at national and subnational levels and calculated the gap between estimated and observed changes in 2016. At the national level, the LiST estimates are close to the actual values of mortality for children <1 year and <5 years in 2016 (at 41 vs 42.6 and 50 vs 56.4, respectively, per 1000 live births). National estimates for stunting, wasting and anaemia at are also close to the actual values of NFHS-4. At the state level, actual changes were higher than the changes from the LiST projections for both mortality and stunting. The predicted changes using the LiST ranged from 33% to 92% of the actual change. The LiST provided national projections close to, albeit slightly below, actual performance over a decade. Reasons for poorer performance of state-specific projections are unknown; further refinements to the LiST for subnational use would improve the usefulness of the tool.

Year published

2019

Authors

Alderman, Harold; Nguyen, Phuong; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Alderman, Harold; Nguyen, Phuong Hong; and Menon, Purnima. 2019. Progress in reducing child mortality and stunting in India: An application of the Lives Saved Tool. Health Policy and Planning 34(9): 667-675. https://doi.org/10.1093/heapol/czz088

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Anaemia; Child Nutrition; Stunting; Malnutrition; Nutrition; Children; Mortality

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Measuring the coverage of nutrition interventions along the continuum of care: Time to act at scale

2019Gillespie, Stuart; Menon, Purnima; Heidkamp, Rebecca A.; Piwoz, Ellen G.; Rawat, Rahul

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Measuring the coverage of nutrition interventions along the continuum of care: Time to act at scale

The global community is committed to addressing malnutrition. And yet, coverage data for high-impact interventions along the continuum of care remain scarce due to several measurement and data collection challenges. In this analysis paper, we identify 24 nutrition interventions that should be tracked by all countries, and determine if their coverage is currently measured by major household nutrition and health surveys. We then present three case studies, using published literature and empirical data from large-scale initiatives, to illustrate the kind of data collection innovations that are feasible. We find that data are not routinely collected in a standardised way across countries for most of the core set of interventions. Case studies—of growth monitoring and screening for acute malnutrition, infant and young child feeding counselling, and nutrition monitoring in India—highlight both challenges and potential solutions. Advancing the nutrition intervention coverage measurement agenda is essential for sustained progress in driving down rates of malnutrition. It will require (1) global consensus on a core set of validated coverage indicators on proven, high-impact nutrition-specific interventions; (2) the inclusion of coverage measurement and indicator guidance in WHO intervention recommendations; (3) the incorporation of these indicators into data collection mechanisms and relevant intervention delivery platforms; and (4) an agenda for continuous measurement improvement.

Year published

2019

Authors

Gillespie, Stuart; Menon, Purnima; Heidkamp, Rebecca A.; Piwoz, Ellen G.; Rawat, Rahul

Citation

Gillespie, Stuart; Menon, Purnima; Heidkamp, Rebecca A.; Piwoz, Ellen G.; Rawat, Rahul; et al. 2019. Measuring the coverage of nutrition interventions along the continuum of care: Time to act at scale. BMJ Global Health 4(Supplement 4): i133–i142. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2018-001290

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Child Nutrition; Malnutrition; Nutrition; Child Feeding; Maternal Nutrition

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Rethinking effective nutrition convergence: An analysis of intervention co-coverage data

2019Menon, Purnima; Avula, Rasmi; Pandey, Shinjini; Scott, Samuel P.; Kumar, Alok

Details

Rethinking effective nutrition convergence: An analysis of intervention co-coverage data

Year published

2019

Authors

Menon, Purnima; Avula, Rasmi; Pandey, Shinjini; Scott, Samuel P.; Kumar, Alok

Citation

Menon, Purnima; Avula, Rasmi; Pandey, S.; Scott, Samuel, and Kumar, Alok. 2019. Rethinking effective nutrition convergence: An analysis of intervention co-coverage data. Economic and Political Weekly 54 (24): 18-21. https://www.epw.in/journal/2019/24/commentary/rethinking-effective-nutrition-convergence.html

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Child Nutrition; Malnutrition; Nutrition; Systems Analysis; Maternal Nutrition; Governance

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Source

Source record

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Social, biological, and programmatic factors linking adolescent pregnancy and early childhood undernutrition: A path analysis of India's 2016 National Family and Health Survey

2019Nguyen, Phuong; Scott, Samuel P.; Neupane, Sumanta; Tran, Lan Mai; Menon, Purnima

Details

Social, biological, and programmatic factors linking adolescent pregnancy and early childhood undernutrition: A path analysis of India's 2016 National Family and Health Survey

Adolescent pregnancy and child undernutrition are major social and public health concerns. We aimed to examine associations between adolescent pregnancy and child undernutrition in India, where one in five adolescents live, and one in three of the world's stunted children.

Year published

2019

Authors

Nguyen, Phuong; Scott, Samuel P.; Neupane, Sumanta; Tran, Lan Mai; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Scott, Samuel; Neupane, Sumanta; Tran, Lan Mai; and Menon, Purnima. 2019. Social, biological, and programmatic factors linking adolescent pregnancy and early childhood undernutrition: a path analysis of India's 2016 National Family and Health Survey. Lancet Child and Adolescent Health 3(7): 463-473. https://doi.org/10.1016/S2352-4642(19)30110-5

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Adolescents; Child Nutrition; Pregnancy; Health; Child Health; Adolescent Fertility; Malnutrition; Nutrition; Early Childhood; Child Feeding; Maternal Nutrition

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

India’s Integrated Child Development Services programme; equity and extent of coverage in 2006 and 2016

2019Chakrabarti, Suman; Raghunathan, Kalyani; Alderman, Harold; Menon, Purnima; Nguyen, Phuong

Details

India’s Integrated Child Development Services programme; equity and extent of coverage in 2006 and 2016

Most research on the delivery of India’s Integrated Child Development Services programme in the period after the reforms has focused on performance in implementation of the programme by states,10 with limited evidence on individual and household uptake or use of the programme. In view of these gaps, we investigated changes in the use of the services over the continuum of care from pregnancy up to early childhood between 2006 and 2016. We assessed equity gaps and factors associated with use of services. Our analysis has policy implications for India, but also offers global lessons to other countries embarking on scalingup integrated programmes to address maternal and child health, nutrition and child development.

Year published

2019

Authors

Chakrabarti, Suman; Raghunathan, Kalyani; Alderman, Harold; Menon, Purnima; Nguyen, Phuong

Citation

Chakrabarti, Suman; Raghunathan, Kalyani; Alderman, Harold; Menon, Purnima; and Nguyen, Phuong Hong. 2019. India’s Integrated Child Development Services programme; equity and extent of coverage in 2006 and 2016. Bulletin of the World Health Organization 97(‎4)‎: 270-282. https://doi.org/10.2471/BLT.18.221135

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Low Income Groups; Child Development; Child Health; Nutrition; Poverty; Maternal Nutrition; Impact Assessment

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open Access

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Progress and inequalities in infant and young child feeding practices in India between 2006 and 2016

2018Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Avula, Rasmi; Headey, Derek D.; Tran, Lan Mai; Ruel, Marie T.; Menon, Purnima

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Progress and inequalities in infant and young child feeding practices in India between 2006 and 2016

Limited evidence exists on socio‐economic status (SES) inequalities in infant and young child feeding (IYCF) in India. We examine trends and changes in inequalities for IYCF practices over 2006–2016 and identify factors that may explain differences in IYCF across SES groups. We use data from the 2015–2016 and 2005–2006 National Family Health Surveys (n = 112,133 children < 24 months). We constructed SES quintiles (Q) and assessed inequalities using concentration and slope indices. We applied path analyses to examine the relationship between SES inequalities, intermediate determinants, and IYCF. Breastfeeding improved significantly over 2006–2016: from 23% to 42% for early initiation of breastfeeding (EIBF) and 46% to 55% for exclusive breastfeeding (EBF). Minimum dietary diversity (MDD) improved modestly (15% to 21%), but adequate diet did not change (~9%). Large SES gaps (Q5–Q1) were found for EIBF (8–17%) and EBF (−15% to −10%) in 2006; these gaps closed in 2016. The most inequitable practices in 2006 were MDD and iron‐rich foods (Q5 ~ 2–4 times higher than Q1); these gaps narrowed in 2016, but levels are low across SES groups. Factors along the path from SES inequalities to IYCF practices included health and nutrition services, information access, maternal education, number of children < 5 years, and urban/rural residence. The improvements in breastfeeding and narrowing of equity gaps in IYCF practices in India are significant achievements. However, ensuring the health and well‐being of India's large birth cohort will require more efforts to further improve breastfeeding, and concerted actions to address all aspects of complementary feeding across SES quintiles.

Year published

2018

Authors

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Avula, Rasmi; Headey, Derek D.; Tran, Lan Mai; Ruel, Marie T.; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Avula, Rasmi; Headey, Derek D.; Tran, Lan Mai; Ruel, Marie T.; and Menon, Purnima. 2018. Progress and inequalities in infant and young child feeding practices in India between 2006 and 2016. Maternal and Child Nutrition 14(S4): e12663. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.12663

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Food Supplements; Infants; Child Nutrition; Socioeconomic Aspects; Nutrition; Infant Feeding; Breastfeeding; Equality

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Trends and drivers of change in the prevalence of anaemia among 1 million women and children in India, 2006 to 2016

2018Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Scott, Samuel; Avula, Rasmi; Tran, Lan Mai; Menon, Purnima

Details

Trends and drivers of change in the prevalence of anaemia among 1 million women and children in India, 2006 to 2016

India carries the largest burden of anaemia globally. Progress to reduce anaemia has been slow despite substantial economic growth and 50 years of programmatic efforts. Identification of the factors that contribute to anaemia reductions is needed to accelerate progress. We examined changes in haemoglobin (Hb) and anaemia among women and children in India from 2006 to 2016 and identified drivers of changes in these outcomes over time.

Year published

2018

Authors

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Scott, Samuel; Avula, Rasmi; Tran, Lan Mai; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Nguyen, Phuong Hong; Scott, Samuel; Avula, Rasmi; Tran, Lan Mai; and Menon, Purnima. 2018. Trends and drivers of change in the prevalence of anaemia among 1 million women and children in India, 2006 to 2016. BMJ Global Health 3(5): e001010. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2018-001010

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Anaemia; Health; Malnutrition; Nutrition; Haemoglobin; Pregnant Women; Mothers; Children; Women

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Understanding the geographical burden of stunting in India: A regression‐decomposition analysis of district‐level data from 2015–16

2018Menon, Purnima; Headey, Derek D.; Avula, Rasmi; Nguyen, Phuong Hong

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Understanding the geographical burden of stunting in India: A regression‐decomposition analysis of district‐level data from 2015–16

India accounts for approximately one third of the world's total population of stunted preschoolers. Addressing global undernutrition, therefore, requires an understanding of the determinants of stunting across India's diverse states and districts. We created a district‐level aggregate data set from the recently released 2015–2016 National and Family Health Survey, which covered 601,509 households in 640 districts. We used mapping and descriptive analyses to understand spatial differences in distribution of stunting. We then used population‐weighted regressions to identify stunting determinants and regression‐based decompositions to explain differences between high‐and low‐stunting districts across India.

Year published

2018

Authors

Menon, Purnima; Headey, Derek D.; Avula, Rasmi; Nguyen, Phuong Hong

Citation

Menon, Purnima; Headey, Derek D.; Avula, Rasmi; and Nguyen, Phuong Hong. 2018. Understanding the geographical burden of stunting in India: A regression‐decomposition analysis of district‐level data from 2015–16. Maternal and Child Nutrition 14(4): e12620. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.12620

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Child Nutrition; Stunting; Malnutrition; Nutrition; Spatial Analysis

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Acceptability of multiple micronutrient powders and iron syrup in Bihar, India

2018Young, Melissa F.; Girard, Amy Webb; Mehta, Rushkan; Srikantiah, Sridhar; Gosdin, Lucas; Menon, Purnima; Ramakrishnan, Usha; Martorell, Reynaldo; Avula, Rasmi

Details

Acceptability of multiple micronutrient powders and iron syrup in Bihar, India

Nearly two thirds of young children are anaemic in Bihar, India. Paediatric iron and folic acid syrup (IFAS) and multiple micronutrient powders (MNPs) are two evidence-based interventions to prevent anaemia. Using a randomized crossover design, we examined the acceptability of IFAS versus MNPs for children 6–23 months. In a catchment area of 2 health centres in Bihar, health front-line workers (FLWs) delivered either (a) IFAS twice weekly or (b) MNPs for 1 month followed by the other supplementation strategy for 1 month to the same families (NCT02610881). Household surveys were conducted at baseline (N = 100), 1 month after receiving the first intervention (1 month; N = 95), and 1 month after the second intervention (2 months; N = 93). Focus group discussions (10 FLWs) and in-depth interviews (20 mothers) were held at 1 and 2 months. We used chi-square and Fisher exact tests to test mothers' product preferences. Qualitative data were analysed using MaxQDA and Excel employing a thematic analysis approach. There was high adherence and acceptability for both products (>80%). There was no significant difference in preference (p < .05) on perceived benefits (39% MNPs, 40% IFAS), side effects (30% MNPs, 30% IFAS), ease of use (42% IFAS, 31% MNPs), child preference (45% IFAS, 37% MNPs), and maternal preference (44% IFAS, 34% MNPs). Mothers and FLWs indicated that the direct administration of IFAS ensured that children consumed the full dose, and MNPs intake depended on the quantity of food consumed, especially among younger children, which emphasizes the need to integrate supplementation with the promotion of optimal child feeding practices.

Year published

2018

Authors

Young, Melissa F.; Girard, Amy Webb; Mehta, Rushkan; Srikantiah, Sridhar; Gosdin, Lucas; Menon, Purnima; Ramakrishnan, Usha; Martorell, Reynaldo; Avula, Rasmi

Citation

Young, Melissa F.; Girard, Amy Webb; Mehta, Rushkan; Srikantiah, Sridhar; Gosdin, Lucas; Menon, Purnima; Ramakrishnan, Usha; Martorell, Reynaldo; and Avula, Rasmi. Acceptability of multiple micronutrient powders and iron syrup in Bihar, India. Maternal and Child Nutrition 14(2): e12572. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.12572

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Food Supplements; Anaemia; Nutrient Deficiencies; Iron Supplementation; Micronutrient Deficiencies; Malnutrition; Supplements; Nutrition; Children; Iron; Iron Deficiency; Folic Acid

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Community-level perceptions of drivers of change in nutrition: Evidence from South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa

2017Nisbett, Nicholas; van den Bold, Mara; Gillespie, Stuart; Menon, Purnima; Davis, Peter; Roopnaraine, Terence; Kampman, Halie; Kohli, Neha; Singh, Akriti; Warren, Andrea

Details

Community-level perceptions of drivers of change in nutrition: Evidence from South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa

Changes in the immediate, underlying and basic determinants of nutritional status at the community- and household-level are a logical and empirical prerequisite to reducing high levels of undernutrition in high burden countries. This paper considers these factors directly from the perspective of community members and frontline workers interviewed in six countries in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. In each country, in-depth interviews were conducted with mothers, other community members and health workers to understand changes in health and nutrition practices, nutrition-specific interventions, underlying drivers and nutrition-sensitive interventions, and life conditions. Overall, the need for basic improvements in livelihood opportunities and infrastructure are solidly underscored. Nutrition-specific and -sensitive changes represented in most cases by deliberate government or NGO supported community interventions are rolling out at a mixed and uneven pace, but are having some significant impacts where solidly implemented. The synthesis presented here provides an invaluable source of information for understanding how community-level change occurred against a wider backdrop of national level progress.

Year published

2017

Authors

Nisbett, Nicholas; van den Bold, Mara; Gillespie, Stuart; Menon, Purnima; Davis, Peter; Roopnaraine, Terence; Kampman, Halie; Kohli, Neha; Singh, Akriti; Warren, Andrea

Citation

Nisbett, Nicholas; van den Bold, Mara; Gillespie, Stuart; Menon, Purnima; Davis, Peter; Roopnaraine, Terry; Kampman, Halie; Kohli, Neha; Singh, Akriti; and Warren, Andrea. 2017. Community-level perceptions of drivers of change in nutrition: Evidence from South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. Global Food Security 13(June 2017): 74-82. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gfs.2017.01.006

Keywords

Health; Households; Nutrition; Government; Infrastructure; Livelihoods; State Intervention; Communities

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Scaling-up interventions to improve infant and young child feeding in India: What will it take?

2017Avula, Rasmi; Oddo, Vanessa M.; Kadiyala, Suneetha; Menon, Purnima

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Scaling-up interventions to improve infant and young child feeding in India: What will it take?

We assessed India's readiness to deliver infant and young child feeding (IYCF) interventions by examining elements related to policy, implementation, financing, and evidence. We based our analysis on review of (a) nutrition policy guidance and program platforms, (b) published literature on interventions to improve IYCF in India, and (c) IYCF program models implemented between 2007 and 2012. We find that Indian policies are well aligned with global technical guidance on counselling interventions. However, guidelines for complementary food supplements (CFS) need to be reexamined. Two national programs with the operational infrastructure to deliver IYCF interventions offer great potential for scale, but more operational guidance, capacity, and monitoring are needed to actively support delivery of IYCF counselling at scale by available frontline workers. Many IYCF implementation efforts to date have experimented with approaches to improve breastfeeding and initiation of complementary feeding but not with improving diet diversity or the quality of food supplements. Financing is currently inadequate to deliver CFS at scale, and governance issues affect the quality and reach of CFS. Available evidence from Indian studies supports the use of counselling strategies to improve breastfeeding practices and initiation of complementary feeding, but limited evidence exists on improving full spectrum of IYCF practices and the impact and operational aspects of CFS in India. We conclude that India is well positioned to support the full spectrum of IYCF using existing policies and delivery platforms, but capacity, financing, and evidence gaps on critical areas of programming can limit impact at scale.

Year published

2017

Authors

Avula, Rasmi; Oddo, Vanessa M.; Kadiyala, Suneetha; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Avula, Rasmi; Oddo, Vanessa M.; Kadiyala, Suneetha; and Menon, Purnima. 2017. Scaling-up interventions to improve infant and young child feeding in India: What will it take? Maternal and Child Nutrition 13(S2): e12414. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.12414

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Food Supplements; Child Nutrition; Nutrition Policies; Complementary Foods; Evaluation; Nutrition Education; Infant Feeding; Child Feeding

Language

English

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

A qualitative study: Understanding the role of intersectoral convergence in the delivery of essential maternal and child nutrition interventions in Odisha, India

2017Kim, Sunny S.; Avula, Rasmi; Ved, Rajani; Kohli, Neha; Singh, Kavita; van den Bold, Mara; Kadiyala, Suneetha; Menon, Purnima

Details

A qualitative study: Understanding the role of intersectoral convergence in the delivery of essential maternal and child nutrition interventions in Odisha, India

Background Convergence of sectoral programs is important for scaling up essential maternal and child health and nutrition interventions. In India, these interventions are implemented by two government programs – Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) and National Rural Health Mission (NRHM). These programs are designed to work together, but there is limited understanding of the nature and extent of coordination in place and needed at the various administrative levels. Our study examined how intersectoral convergence in nutrition programming is operationalized between ICDS and NRHM from the state to village levels in Odisha, and the factors influencing convergence in policy implementation and service delivery. Methods Semi-structured interviews were conducted with state-level stakeholders (n = 12), district (n = 19) and block officials (n = 66), and frontline workers (FLWs, n = 48). Systematic coding and content analysis of transcripts were undertaken to elucidate themes and patterns related to the degree and mechanisms of convergence, types of actions/services, and facilitators and barriers. Results Close collaboration at state level was observed in developing guidelines, planning, and reviewing programs, facilitated by a shared motivation and recognized leadership for coordination. However, the health department was perceived to drive the agenda, and different priorities and little data sharing presented challenges. At the district level, there were joint planning and review meetings, trainings, and data sharing, but poor participation in the intersectoral meetings and limited supervision. While the block level is the hub for planning and supervision, cooperation is limited by the lack of guidelines for coordination, heavy workload, inadequate resources, and poor communication. Strong collaboration among FLWs was facilitated by close interpersonal communication and mutual understanding of roles and responsibilities. Conclusions Congruent or shared priorities and regularity of actions between sectors across all levels will likely improve the quality of coordination, and clear roles and leadership and accountability are imperative. As convergence is a means to achieving effective coverage and delivery of services for improved maternal and child health and nutrition, focus should be on delivering all the essential services to the mother-child dyads through mechanisms that facilitate a continuum of care approach, rather than sectorally-driven, service-specific delivery processes.

Year published

2017

Authors

Kim, Sunny S.; Avula, Rasmi; Ved, Rajani; Kohli, Neha; Singh, Kavita; van den Bold, Mara; Kadiyala, Suneetha; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Kim, Sunny S.; Avula, Rasmi; Ved, Rajani; Kohli, Neha; Singh, Kavita; van den Bold, Mara; Kadiyala, Suneetha; and Menon, Purnima. 2017. Understanding the role of intersectoral convergence in the delivery of essential maternal and child nutrition interventions in Odisha, India: A qualitative study. BMC Public Health 17 (1): 161. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-017-4088-z

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Coordination; Nutrition; Collaboration

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Evidence from Odisha’s Mamata scheme: Can conditional cash transfers improve the uptake of nutrition interventions and household food security?

2017Raghunathan, Kalyani; Chakrabarti, Suman; Avula, Rasmi; Kim, Sunny S.

Details

Evidence from Odisha’s Mamata scheme: Can conditional cash transfers improve the uptake of nutrition interventions and household food security?

There is considerable global evidence on the effectiveness of cash transfers in improving health and nutrition outcomes; however, the evidence from South Asia, particularly India, is limited. In the context of India where more than a third of children are undernourished, and where there is considerable under-utilization of health and nutrition interventions, it is opportune to investigate the impact of cash transfer programs on the use of interventions. We study one conditional cash transfer program, Mamata scheme, implemented in the state of Odisha, in India that targeted pregnant and lactating women. Using survey data on 1161 households from three districts in the state of Odisha, we examine the effect of the scheme on eight outcomes: 1) pregnancy registration; 2) receipt of antenatal services; 3) receipt of iron and folic acid (IFA) tablets; 4) exposure to counseling during pregnancy; 5) exposure to postnatal counseling; 6) exclusive breastfeeding; 7) full immunization; and 8) household food security. We conduct regression analyses and correct for endogeneity using nearest-neighbor matching and inverse-probability weighting models. We find that the receipt of payments from the Mamata scheme is associated with a 5 percentage point (pp) increase in the likelihood of receiving antenatal services, a 10 pp increase in the likelihood of receiving IFA tablets, and a decline of 0.84 on the Household Food Insecurity Access Scale. These results provide the first quantitative estimates of effects associated with the Mamata scheme, which can inform the design of government policies related to conditional cash transfers.

Year published

2017

Authors

Raghunathan, Kalyani; Chakrabarti, Suman; Avula, Rasmi; Kim, Sunny S.

Citation

Raghunathan, Kalyani; Chakrabarti, Suman; Avula, Rasmi; and Kim, Sunny S. 2017. Can conditional cash transfers improve the uptake of nutrition interventions and household food security? Evidence from Odisha’s Mamata scheme. PLoS ONE 12(12): e0188952. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0188952

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Maternal and Child Health; Pregnancy; Health; Households; Malnutrition; Nutrition; Cash Transfers; Food Security; Maternal Nutrition

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Reducing stunting in India: what investments are needed?

2016Avula, Rasmi; Raykar, Neha; Menon, Purnima; Laxminarayan, Ramanan

Details

Reducing stunting in India: what investments are needed?

Year published

2016

Authors

Avula, Rasmi; Raykar, Neha; Menon, Purnima; Laxminarayan, Ramanan

Citation

Avula, Rasmi; Raykar, Neha; Menon, Purnima; and Laxminarayan, Ramanan. 2016. Reducing stunting in India: what investments are needed? Maternal and Child Nutrition 12(Suppl. 1), pp. 249–252. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.12291

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Investment; Stunting

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Estimating the cost of delivering direct nutrition interventions at scale: National and subnational level insights from India

2016Menon, Purnima; McDonald, Christine M.; Chakrabarti, Suman

Details

Estimating the cost of delivering direct nutrition interventions at scale: National and subnational level insights from India

India's national nutrition and health programmes are largely designed to provide evidence‐based nutrition‐specific interventions, but intervention coverage is low due to a combination of implementation challenges, capacity and financing gaps. Global cost estimates for nutrition are available but national and subnational costs are not. We estimated national and subnational costs of delivering recommended nutrition‐specific interventions using the Scaling Up Nutrition (SUN) costing approach. We compared costs of delivering the SUN interventions at 100% scale with those of nationally recommended interventions. Target populations (TP) for interventions were estimated using national population and nutrition data. Unit costs (UC) were derived from programmatic data. The cost of delivering an intervention at 100% coverage was calculated as (UC*projected TP). Cost estimates varied; estimates for SUN interventions were lower than estimates for nationally recommended interventions because of differences in choice of intervention, target group or unit cost. US$5.9bn/year are required to deliver a set of nationally recommended nutrition interventions at scale in India, while US$4.2bn are required for the SUN interventions. Cash transfers (49%) and food supplements (40%) contribute most to costs of nationally recommended interventions, while food supplements to prevent and treat malnutrition contribute most to the SUN costs. We conclude that although such costing is useful to generate broad estimates, there is an urgent need for further costing studies on the true unit costs of the delivery of nutrition‐specific interventions in different local contexts to be able to project accurate national and subnational budgets for nutrition in India.

Year published

2016

Authors

Menon, Purnima; McDonald, Christine M.; Chakrabarti, Suman

Citation

Menon, Purnima; McDonald, Christine M.; and Chakrabarti, Suman. 2016. Estimating the cost of delivering direct nutrition interventions at scale: National and subnational level insights from India. Maternal and Child Nutrition 12 (Suppl. 1), pp. 169–185. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.12257

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Scaling Up; Health; Nutrition; Cost Analysis

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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Journal Article

Predictors of essential health and nutrition service delivery in Bihar, India: Results from household and frontline worker surveys

2015Kosec, Katrina; Avula, Rasmi; Holtemeyer, Brian; Tyagi, Parul; Hausladen, Stephanie; Menon, Purnima

Details

Predictors of essential health and nutrition service delivery in Bihar, India: Results from household and frontline worker surveys

In Bihar, India, coverage of essential health and nutrition interventions is low. These interventions are provided by 2 national programs–the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) and Health/National Rural Health Mission (NRHM)–through Anganwadi workers (AWWs) and Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs), respectively. Little is known, however, about factors that predict effective service delivery by these frontline workers (FLWs) or receipt of services by households. This study examined the predictors of use of 4 services: (1) immunization information and services, (2) food supplements, (3) pregnancy care information, and (4) general nutrition information.Data are from a 2012 cross-sectional survey of 6,002 households in 400 randomly selected villages in 1 district of Bihar state, as well as an integrated survey of 377 AWWs and 382 ASHAs from the same villages. For each of the 4 service delivery outcomes, logistic regression models were specified using a combination of variables hypothesized to be supply- and demand-side drivers of service utilization.About 35% of households reported receiving any of the 4 services. Monetary immunization incentives for AWWs (OR = 1.55, CI = 1.02-2.36) and above-median household head education (OR = 1.39, CI = 1.05-1.82) were statistically significant predictors of household receipt of immunization services. Higher household socioeconomic status was associated with significantly lower odds of receiving food supplements (OR = 0.87, CI = 0.79-0.96). ASHAs receiving incentives for institutional delivery (OR = 1.52, CI = 0.99-2.33) was marginally associated with higher odds of receiving pregnancy care information, and ASHAs who maintained records of pregnant women was significantly associated with households receiving such information (OR = 2.25, CI = 1.07-4.74). AWWs receiving immunization incentives was associated with significantly higher odds of households receiving general nutrition information (OR = 1.92, CI = 1.08-3.41), suggesting a large spillover effect of incentives from product- to information-oriented services.Product-oriented incentives affect delivery of both product- and information-oriented services, although household factors are also important. In India, existing government programs can mitigate supply- and demand-side constraints to receiving essential interventions by optimizing existing incentives for FLWs in national programs, helping FLWs better organize their work, and raising awareness among groups who are less likely to access services.

Year published

2015

Authors

Kosec, Katrina; Avula, Rasmi; Holtemeyer, Brian; Tyagi, Parul; Hausladen, Stephanie; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Kosec, Katrina; Avula, Rasmi; Holtemeyer, Brian; Tyagi, Parul; Hausladen, Stephanie; and Menon, Purnima. 2015. Predictors of essential health and nutrition service delivery in Bihar, India: Results from household and frontline worker surveys. Global Health: Science and Practice 3(2): 255-273. https://doi.org/10.9745/ghsp-d-14-00144

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Gender; Pregnancy; Surveys; Health; Households; Social Protection; Nutrition; Social Safety Nets; Women

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-3.0

Project

Policies, Institutions, and Markets

Record type

Journal Article

Resource thumbnail

Journal Article

Agricultural research for nutrition outcomes – rethinking the agenda

2015McDermott, John J.; Johnson, Nancy L.; Kadiyala, S.; Kennedy, G.; Wyatt, A.J.

Details

Agricultural research for nutrition outcomes – rethinking the agenda

Agriculture and food are assumed to be critical determinants of stunting and micronutrient deficiency. However, agriculture research for development has not translated as expected into better nutrition outcomes. We argue that to do so, agriculture research needs to be fundamentally changed, from the current emphasis on supply-side production and productivity goals to understanding consumption and addressing factors that can improve diet quality. Some of the research will be to improve the efficiency of supply for more nutritious foods. Other research will need to focus on factors that promote diet quality rather than focus on food security goals through stocks of staple cereals. Because of its importance in low-income, high-burden countries, agriculture can also contribute more effectively to multisectoral nutrition-sensitive development strategies and programs. Critical roles for agricultural research in multisectoral actions will be better metrics, indicators and research studies for diet quality and better evaluation methods – both randomized trials for specific interventions and contribution analysis through theories of change for more complex multisectoral system interventions to prevent stunting and micronutrient deficiencies. To achieve improvements in nutrition outcomes at scale, researchers must engage in new partnerships. In food systems, these partnerships must include more disciplines from agriculture and food science through economics and social science to business and delivery science. Food system researchers will also need to engage more with value chain actors and policy makers. Current efforts to improve nutrition outcomes at scale are severely hampered by data and evidence gaps that prevent better decisions and faster learning.

Year published

2015

Authors

McDermott, John J.; Johnson, Nancy L.; Kadiyala, S.; Kennedy, G.; Wyatt, A.J.

Citation

McDermott, J.; Johnson, N.; Kadiyala, S.; Kennedy, G.; Wyatt, A.J. (2015) Agricultural research for nutrition outcomes – rethinking the agenda. Food Security 7(3) p. 593-607 ISSN: 1876-4517

Keywords

Data; Stunting; Measurement; Research; Quality; Agriculture; Evaluation; Human Nutrition; Nutrition; Food Security; Diet Quality; Diet

Language

English

Access/Licence

Open AccessCC-BY-4.0

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

Resource thumbnail

Journal Article

At-scale delivery of Essential Nutrition Interventions (ENIs) in India is limited by variable gaps in policy, design, implementation and demand

2015Avula, Rasmi; Kim, Sunny S.; Kohli, Neha; Chakrabarti, Suman; Tyagi, Parul; Singh, Kavita; van den Bold, Mara; Kadiyala, Suneetha; Menon, Purnima

Details

At-scale delivery of Essential Nutrition Interventions (ENIs) in India is limited by variable gaps in policy, design, implementation and demand

Evidence suggests that increasing coverage of 14 ENIs from pre‐pregnancy to early childhood can reduce maternal and child undernutrition. In India, less than 55% of women and children receive any of the ENIs. We assessed readiness to achieve at‐scale delivery of ENIs through an analysis of policies, programs, intervention design, implementation, monitoring and service use. Policy guidance and program design were examined through content analysis. We studied provision of and demand for ENIs in two states ‐ Odisha & Madhya Pradesh, using primary data collection [a survey of frontline workers (FLW) (N=1140) and households with children aged 0‐2 y (N=2300) in 3 districts per state; semi‐structured interviews with officials and health workers at multiple levels]. Evidence‐based policies and operational guidelines exist for most ENIs but not monitoring indicators; gaps exist for community‐based management of acute malnutrition (CMAM) and nutritional care during illness. Limited implementation experience exists for many ENIs, particularly for counseling of complementary feeding, pediatric anemia control and CMAM. FLW knowledge and role clarity are also weak for these ENIs. Less than 1/3 of mothers got infant feeding advice during FLW home visits; receipt of information on pediatric anemia and awareness about use of iron supplements were also low, reflecting demand challenges. Despite policies and program guidelines, scale up of ENIs in India is limited by gaps in operational guidance, monitoring indicators, unclear FLW roles and low service demand. Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, through POSHAN, led by IFPRI

Year published

2015

Authors

Avula, Rasmi; Kim, Sunny S.; Kohli, Neha; Chakrabarti, Suman; Tyagi, Parul; Singh, Kavita; van den Bold, Mara; Kadiyala, Suneetha; Menon, Purnima

Citation

Avula, Rasmi; Kim, Sunny S.; Kohli, Neha; Chakrabarti, Suman; Tyagi, Parul; Singh, Kavita; van den Bold, Mara; Kadiyala, Suneetha; and Menon, Purnima. 2015. At-scale delivery of Essential Nutrition Interventions (ENIs) in India is limited by variable gaps in policy, design, implementation and demand. The FASEB Journal 29: 898.32. https://doi.org/10.1096/fasebj.29.1_supplement.898.32

Country/Region

India

Keywords

Southern Asia; Asia; Nutrition; Guidelines; Diet

Language

English

Access/Licence

Limited Access

Project

Agriculture for Nutrition and Health

Record type

Journal Article

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