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Nutrition Interventions Integrated into an Existing Maternal, Neonatal, and Child Health Program Reduce Food Insecurity Among Recently Delivered and Pregnant Women in Bangladesh

Overview
Journal J Nutr
Publisher Elsevier
Date 2019 Jan 17
PMID 30649523
Citations 7
Authors
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Abstract

Background: Antenatal care may be a means to reduce food insecurity in pregnancy and postpartum periods.

Objective: With the use of a cluster-randomized design, we tested whether participation in nutrition-focused antenatal care intending to improve household knowledge about the importance of nutrition for pregnant and lactating women and encourage allocation of household resources to ensure sufficient quality and quantity of foods, without providing food assistance, would reduce household food insecurity.

Methods: Alive & Thrive integrated nutrition interventions into an existing Maternal, Neonatal, and Child Health (MNCH) program in Bangladesh. The nutrition-focused MNCH package was delivered in 10 subdistricts through antenatal care visits with the use of interpersonal communication, community mobilization, and monitoring of weight gain, aiming to improve maternal diet quality, quantity, and micronutrient intake during pregnancy and breastfeeding. The package included components that could reduce food insecurity, measured using the Household Food Insecurity Access Scale. To examine the impact of the nutrition-focused MNCH package compared with the standard MNCH package, we used linear and multinomial logit regression models, adjusted for subdistrict clustering, to test differences at endline in items, domains, and categories of food insecurity, after first confirming no differences at baseline.

Results: At baseline, nearly half of households were food insecure. At endline, the groups differed in food insecurity, whether expressed as items, domains, or categories, with food insecurity in the nutrition-focused MNCH group 22 percentage points lower than in the standard MNCH group and 20 percentage points lower than at baseline.

Conclusions: Participation in nutrition-focused antenatal care reduced household food insecurity among recently delivered and pregnant women. Integration of social and behavioral nutrition interventions into antenatal care with components that promote food security provides a potentially effective means to reduce food insecurity, without incurring high costs of providing supplemental food, in populations where limited resources can be directed towards accessing adequate and appropriate foods. Registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT02745249.

Citing Articles

Impact of Consultation with Registered Dietitians on Reducing Inappropriate Weight Gain in Pregnant Patients with Food Insecurity.

Moriarty K, Fleuriscar J, Lindsay S, Manfredi K, OSullivan D, Mullins J Nutrients. 2025; 17(5).

PMID: 40077659 PMC: 11902045. DOI: 10.3390/nu17050789.


Storytelling for persuasion: Insights from community health workers on how they engage family members to improve adoption of recommended maternal nutrition and breastfeeding behaviours in rural Bangladesh.

Grandner G, Rasmussen K, Dickin K, Menon P, Yeh T, Hoddinott J Matern Child Nutr. 2022; 18(4):e13408.

PMID: 35851830 PMC: 9480912. DOI: 10.1111/mcn.13408.


Systematic Review of Interventions Addressing Food Insecurity in Pregnant Women and New Mothers.

McKay F, Spiteri S, Zinga J, Sulemani K, Jacobs S, Ranjan N Curr Nutr Rep. 2022; 11(3):486-499.

PMID: 35501553 PMC: 9381473. DOI: 10.1007/s13668-022-00418-z.


Gaps in the implementation and uptake of maternal nutrition interventions in antenatal care services in Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia and India.

Sanghvi T, Nguyen P, Tharaney M, Ghosh S, Escobar-Alegria J, Mahmud Z Matern Child Nutr. 2021; 18(2):e13293.

PMID: 34816602 PMC: 8932725. DOI: 10.1111/mcn.13293.


Can nutrition education mitigate the impacts of COVID-19 on dietary quality? Cluster-randomised controlled trial evidence in Myanmar's Central Dry Zone.

Ragasa C, Lambrecht I, Mahrt K, Zhao H, Aung Z, Scott J Matern Child Nutr. 2021; 17(4):e13259.

PMID: 34409727 PMC: 8420230. DOI: 10.1111/mcn.13259.


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