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Impact evaluation of a community nutrition and livelihood program on child nutrition in rural Bangladesh
Authors:Yunhee Kang  Indira Prihartono  Md Iqbal Hossain  Shinhye Min  Heeyeon Kim  Yoonho Cho  Seungheon Han  Hee Sun Kim  Jaganmay P Biswas
Institution:1. Department of International Health, Center for Human Nutrition, 2. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA;3. World Vision Bangladesh, Banani, Dhaka, Bangladesh;4. World Vision Korea, Seoul, South Korea;5. Independent Consultant, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia;6. Korea Institute of Public Administration, Seoul, South Korea;7. Department of Food and Nutrition, College of Human Ecology, Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea
Abstract:Given the high prevalence of child undernutrition in Bangladesh, multi-sectoral approaches involving livelihood promotion have potential to mitigate the burden of undernutrition. This study examined the impact of an economic development (ED) program providing poultry assets, gardening skills and saving training added to the Positive Deviant (PD)/Hearth program (PDH/ED), compared to PD/Hearth only (PDH). A total of 1029 children who attended PD/Hearth sessions in September–November 2018 at 6–13 months of age were enrolled in the cohort study in July–August 2019. The cohort, comprised of 532 children in the PDH/ED group and 593 children in the PDH group, was reassessed in November 2020. The program impact on child nutrition, food security, crop production, dietary quality and household income was estimated using a difference-in-differences approach accounting for the sociodemographic differences between PDH/ED and PDH groups. Compared to the PDH group, the PDH/ED group showed increases in child dietary diversity score (DDS) (+0.32), child minimum dietary diversity (13.7 percentage points pp]), and maternal DDS (+0.28) (all p < 0.05). From 2019 to 2020, the PDH/ED households improved food security by 12.6 pp and diversified crop production (bananas (9.7 pp), papaya (11.1 pp), carrots (3.8 pp) and lemons (5.9 pp)), and increased the proportion of annual income ≥60,000 Taka by 12.4 pp and last month income ≥5000 Taka by 7.8 pp, compared to PDH group (all p < 0.05). However, there was no impact on child nutritional status, morbidity, livestock ownership and total annual/last income. Incorporating an ED program into nutrition programming could benefit food security and dietary diversity in rural Bangladesh.
Keywords:International Child Health Nutrition  low income  programme evaluation  undernutrition  underweight
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