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1.
Artículo en Inglés | IMSEAR | ID: sea-165583

RESUMEN

Objectives: Infants from 6 months onwards need energy- and nutrient dense complementary foods. This is a challenge in Ethiopia, where monotonous diets of poor nutrient density are fed to young children. We used data of the National Food Consumption Survey to determine nutrient adequacy of young children's diet and develop local food-based complementary feeding recommendations (CFR). Methods: Representative data were used on food intakes of children 12-23 months, from four regions. Linear goal programming (Optifood) was applied to develop population specific local foodbased CFR based on local foods and identify critical nutrients, for which local foods cannot meet recommendations. Results: Data were available from 1544 children. 40-47 different foods were frequently consumed by(>5%of children) and >85% still received breast milk. Portion sizes were small: 62-73% of the consumed foods were eaten in daily portion sizes below 15 gram. Foods consumed in larger quantities (>100 gram) differ per region. Dairy Milk was consumed in large quantities in each region. Wheat was consumed in all regions but in moderate quantities (25 grams per day in SNNP to >100 gram in Tigray). Due to low overall intakes micronutrient deficiencies are likely. Promising foods to contribute to micronutrient intake are chickpeas (iron), millet (iron and calcium) and teff (iron), but there are no local foods with meaningful zinc contents. Conclusions: The findings indicate that improved CFR can probably meet the nutrient requirements of some nutrients in Ethiopian young children. However, additional interventions will be required to meet requirements of zinc and probably others.

2.
Artículo en Inglés | IMSEAR | ID: sea-165574

RESUMEN

Objectives: AIM is a partnership of 20 organizations in Europe and Africa. It includes 7 projects that combine assurance of sufficient and affordable quality of food supply (‘push') with stimulation of demand for nutritious foods (‘pull'). AIM provides the opportunity to assess the effectiveness of different market-based solutions and extract lessons for up-scaling and replication. The publicprivate and multi-strategy character of the AIM programme requires a monitoring and evaluation (M&E) system that addresses the complexity of the AIM partnership and its interventions. Methods: Through participatory consultation result pathways and M&E plans for each project were developed. These laid the basis for the AIM overall programme logic and M&E framework. Results: Building the M&E system involved (re)defining project impact pathways; identifying indicators; further landscape analysis; investment in baseline studies and evaluations; designing monitoring and reflection processes; formulation of project overarching learning questions and specific research questions within the projects. Conclusions: Building a meaningful M&E system for a complex programme like AIM's requires: bridging a development perspective (government, NGOs) with a production perspective (business); addressing reluctance to cover extra costs for M&E; finding creative solutions for building evidence, including rigorous designs for complex interventions; and reaching agreement on sharing results in the public domain which is not always desirable from a production perspective. Building capacity and trust coupled with good governance forms the basis for this process.

3.
Artículo en Inglés | IMSEAR | ID: sea-165399

RESUMEN

Objectives: To measure the effect of daily consumption of provitamin A-biofortified cassava on vitamin A status in children aged 5-13 years. Methods: Mild-to-moderate vitamin A deficient children (n=342) were randomly allocated to groups receiving: 1) 375 g of white cassava and placebo supplement; 2) 375 g of white cassava and a supplement of β-carotene (1,054 μg); 3) 375 g of biofortified cassava and placebo supplement. Children received the intervention 6 days/week for 18.5 weeks. Field staff and participants were blinded to supplementation. Cooked cassava was mashed with salt and 4 g of oil per portion. Biofortified cassava supplied 208 μg RAE, which is ~50% of the age-specific estimated average requirement for vitamin A for children. The primary endpoint was serum retinol concentration and secondary endpoint was serum β-carotene concentration, both at end of intervention; in the analysis, we adjusted for sex and serum concentrations at baseline of retinol, C-reactive protein and α1-acid-glycoprotein. Results: Complete data were collected for 337 children. Compliance to cassava feeding was similar between treatment groups. Preliminary results showed that consumption of biofortified cassava and β-carotene supplementation resulted in a similar increase in retinol concentrations (for both interventions, mean: 0.81 μmol/L versus 0.77 μmol/L; difference, 95% CI: 0.04 μmol/L, 0.00─0.07 μmol/L) but in a different increase in serum β-carotene concentration (for β-carotene supplement group, mean: 0.25 μmol/L (95% CI: 0.17─0.33), for biofortified cassava group, mean: 0.81 μmol/L (95% CI: 0.73-0.88)) Conclusions: Provitamin A-biofortified cassava improves the vitamin A status of primary school children in Kenya.

4.
Artículo en Inglés | IMSEAR | ID: sea-164884

RESUMEN

Objectives: To assess the diagnostic performance of serum concentrations of retinol-binding protein (RBP), transthyretin, retinol concentration measured by fluorometry and RBP:transthyretin molar ratio, either alone or in combination, to estimate the prevalence of vitamin A deficiency (serum retinol concentration <0.70 μmol/L measured by high-performance liquid chromatography(HPLC)). Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted in 15 primary schools in Kibwezi and Makindu districts in Eastern province, Kenya in June 2010 with 375 schoolchildren (6-12 years), 25 randomly selected from each school by lot quality assurance sampling. Results: Complete data were collected for 372 children. Mean serum concentration of retinol (HPLC), RBP and transthyretin were 0.87 (SD 0.19) µmol/L, 0.67 (SD 0.17) µmol/L and 3.0 (SD 0.62) µmol/L. The mean RBP: Transthyretin molar ratio was 0.23. The prevalence of vitamin A deficiency measured with HPLC was 18%. Transthyretin and RBP showed the largest area under the curve (AUCs 0.96 and 0.93, respectively). Logistic regression resulted in a model predicting vitamin A deficiency based on RBP, transthyretin and C-reactive protein (AUC: 0.98) and prevalence depending cutpoints for the linear predictor were calculated. Conclusions: Combination of transthyretin, RBP and C-reactive protein in a linear predictor showed excellent diagnostic performance in assessing vitamin A status, and has great potential to eventually replace serum retinol concentration measured by HPLC as the preferred method to assess the population burden of vitamin A deficiency. Further research is needed to confirm whether this linear predictor yields similar results in different populations and laboratories. Our methodology can be widely applied for other diagnostic aims.

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