1,138 results on '"Sanghvi T"'
Search Results
52. Importance of coverage and quality for impact of nutrition interventions delivered through an existing health programme in Bangladesh.
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Nguyen PH, Frongillo EA, Sanghvi T, Kim SS, Alayon S, Tran LM, Mahmud Z, Aktar B, and Menon P
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- Adult, Bangladesh, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Pregnancy, Prenatal Care methods, Prenatal Care standards, Prenatal Care statistics & numerical data, Random Allocation, Community Health Workers standards, Community Health Workers statistics & numerical data, Health Promotion methods, Health Promotion standards, Health Promotion statistics & numerical data, Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Nutritional Status
- Abstract
Understanding implementation of interventions is critical to illuminate if, how, and why the interventions achieve impact. Alive & Thrive integrated a nutrition intervention into an existing maternal, neonatal, and child health (MNCH) programme in Bangladesh, documenting improvements in women's micronutrient supplement intake and dietary diversity. Here, we examined how well the nutrition intervention was implemented and which elements of implementation explained intervention impact. Survey data were collected in 2015 and 2016 from frontline health workers (FLW) and households in areas randomized to nutrition-focused MNCH (intensified interpersonal counselling, community mobilization, distribution of free micronutrient supplements, and weight-gain monitoring) or standard MNCH (antenatal care with standard nutrition counselling). Seven intervention elements were measured: time commitment, training quality, knowledge, coverage, counselling quality, supervision, and incentives. Multiple regression was used to derive difference-in-differences (DID) estimates. Using village-level endline data, path analysis was used to determine which elements most explained intervention impacts. FLWs in both areas were highly committed and well supervised. Coverage was high (>90%) for counselling, supplement provision, and weight-gain monitoring. Improvements were significantly greater for nutrition-focused MNCH, versus standard MNCH, for training quality (DID: 2.42 points of 10), knowledge (DID: 1.20 points), delivery coverage (DID: 4.16 points), and counselling quality (DID: 1.60 points). Impact was substantially explained by coverage and delivery quality. In conclusion, integration nutrition intervention into the MNCH programme was feasible and well-implemented. Although differences in coverage and counselling quality most explained impacts, all intervention elements-particularly FLW training and performance-were likely important to achieving impact., (© 2018 The Authors. Maternal and Child Nutrition Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
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- 2018
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53. Large-Scale Social and Behavior Change Communication Interventions Have Sustained Impacts on Infant and Young Child Feeding Knowledge and Practices: Results of a 2-Year Follow-Up Study in Bangladesh.
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Kim SS, Nguyen PH, Tran LM, Sanghvi T, Mahmud Z, Haque MR, Afsana K, Frongillo EA, Ruel MT, and Menon P
- Subjects
- Adult, Bangladesh, Counseling, Cross-Sectional Studies, Diet, Family Characteristics, Feeding Behavior, Female, Financing, Organized, Follow-Up Studies, Health Promotion economics, Humans, Infant, Iron administration & dosage, Male, Mass Media, Residence Characteristics, Breast Feeding, Communication, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Health Promotion methods, Health Services economics, Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Program Evaluation
- Abstract
Background: Sustained improvements in infant and young child feeding (IYCF) require continued implementation of effective interventions. From 2010-2014, Alive & Thrive (A&T) provided intensive interpersonal counseling (IPC), community mobilization (CM), and mass media (MM) in Bangladesh, demonstrating impact on IYCF practices. Since 2014, implementation has been continued and scaled up by national partners with support from other donors and with modifications such as added focus on maternal nutrition and reduced program intensity., Objective: We assessed changes in intervention exposure and IYCF knowledge and practices in the intensive (IPC + CM + MM) compared with nonintensive areas (standard nutrition counseling + less intensive CM and MM) 2 y after termination of initial external donor support., Methods: We used a cluster-randomized design with repeated cross-sectional surveys at baseline (2010, n = 2188), endline (2014, n = 2001), and follow-up (2016, n = 2400) in the same communities, among households with children 0-23.9 mo of age. Within-group differences over time and differences between groups in changes were tested., Results: In intensive areas, exposure to IPC decreased slightly between endline and follow-up (88.9% to 77.2%); exposure to CM activities decreased significantly (29.3% to 3.6%); and MM exposure was mostly unchanged (28.1-69.1% across 7 TV spots). Exposure to interventions did not expand in nonintensive areas. Most IYCF indicators in intensive areas declined from endline to follow-up, but remained higher than at baseline. Large differential improvements of 12-17 percentage points in intensive, compared with nonintensive areas, between baseline and follow-up remained for early initiation of and exclusive breastfeeding, timely introduction of foods, and consumption of iron-rich foods. Differential impact in breastfeeding knowledge remained between baseline and follow-up; complementary feeding knowledge increased similarly in both groups., Conclusions: Continued IPC exposure and sustained impacts on IYCF knowledge and practices in intensive areas indicated lasting benefits from A&T's interventions as they underwent major scale-up with reduced intensity. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT02740842.
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- 2018
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54. A comparison of minimum dietary diversity in Bangladesh in 2011 and 2014.
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Blackstone S and Sanghvi T
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- Bangladesh epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Infant, Nutritional Requirements, Prenatal Care statistics & numerical data, Socioeconomic Factors, Diet statistics & numerical data, Feeding Behavior physiology, Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
- Abstract
Improving infant and young child feeding practices is critical for improving growth and reducing child mortality and morbidity. This paper aims to compare predictors of minimum dietary diversity, an important indicator of adequate complementary feeding practices, in Bangladesh in 2011 and 2014. The 2011 and 2014 Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey were used to examine predictors of minimum dietary diversity among 6-23 months. An additional analysis was conducted for the 18-23-month group, because a significant increase in meeting minimum dietary diversity recommendations was seen in this age group only. Factors found to be associated with practices were compared across time points. In 2011, minimum dietary diversity was 23.8% and increased to 28.8% in 2014. Among children 18-23 months, in 2011, minimum dietary diversity was 32.5% and increased to 42.8% in 2014. Among all children, wealth, education, exposure to media, and antenatal care were significant predictors of dietary diversity. In the 18-23-month age group, significant predictors in 2011 were wealth and decision making. In 2014, significant predictors were education and exposure to media. Demographic trends indicated a significant increase in education and exposure to media between 2011 and 2014. As these were significant for minimum dietary diversity in 2014 overall and for 18-23 months, they might be important targets of future interventions, specifically utilizing media channels and tailoring special strategies for women with low education and limited exposure to media., (© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2018
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55. Engagement of Husbands in a Maternal Nutrition Program Substantially Contributed to Greater Intake of Micronutrient Supplements and Dietary Diversity during Pregnancy: Results of a Cluster-Randomized Program Evaluation in Bangladesh.
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Nguyen PH, Frongillo EA, Sanghvi T, Wable G, Mahmud Z, Tran LM, Aktar B, Afsana K, Alayon S, Ruel MT, and Menon P
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- Adult, Awareness, Bangladesh, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Health Promotion methods, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Pregnancy, Self Efficacy, Young Adult, Diet, Healthy, Dietary Supplements, Feeding Behavior, Micronutrients administration & dosage, Pregnant Women, Program Evaluation, Spouses
- Abstract
Background: Although husbands may provide support during pregnancy, limited evidence exists on how to promote husbands' engagement and what impact it has. Alive & Thrive integrated nutrition-focused interventions, targeting both wives and husbands, through an existing Maternal, Neonatal, and Child Health (MNCH) platform in Bangladesh., Objectives: We evaluated 1) the impact of a nutrition-focused MNCH program, compared with the standard MNCH program, on husbands' behavioral determinants (i.e., awareness, knowledge, self-efficacy) and support to wives to adopt optimal nutrition practices and 2) how much of the previously documented impact on women's supplement intake and dietary diversity was explained by husbands' behavioral determinants and support., Methods: We used a cluster-randomized design with cross-sectional surveys at baseline (2015) and endline (2016) (n = ∼1000 women and ∼700 husbands/survey). We used mixed linear regression accounting for clustering to estimate difference-in-differences (DIDs) for impact on husbands' behavioral determinants and path analysis to examine how much these determinants explained the impact on women's nutrition behaviors., Results: Of husbands in the nutrition-focused MNCH group, 62% were counseled by health workers, 66% attended a husbands' forum, and 34% saw video shows. The nutrition-focused MNCH, compared with the standard MNCH group, resulted in greater husbands' awareness (DID: 2.74 of 10 points), knowledge (DID: 1.31), self-efficacy and social norms with regard to optimal nutrition practices (difference: 1.08), and support to their wives (DID: 1.86). Husbands' behavioral determinants and support explained nearly half of the program impact for maternal supplement intake and one-quarter for dietary diversity., Conclusions: A nutrition-focused MNCH program that promoted and facilitated husbands' engagement during their wives' pregnancies significantly improved husbands' awareness, knowledge, self-efficacy, and support. These improvements substantially explained the program's impact on women's intake of micronutrient supplements and dietary diversity. Targeting wives and husbands and designing activities to engage men in maternal nutrition programs are important to maximize impact. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT02745249.
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- 2018
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56. Post Locoregional Therapy Treatment Imaging in Hepatocellular Carcinoma Patients: A Literature-based Review.
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Young S, Taylor AJ, and Sanghvi T
- Abstract
Imaging plays a crucial role in the diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) as well as in determining treatment efficacy, or complications, following therapy. Unlike other cancers, HCC is most commonly treated by locoregional therapies (LRTs) such as thermal ablation, transarterial chemoembolization, and transarterial radioembolization. These treatments can lead to changes on imaging that make determination of residual/recurrent disease difficult. This literature-based review discusses the expected postimaging findings following LRT., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflict of interests related to this publication.
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- 2018
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57. MRI for hepatocellular carcinoma: a primer for magnetic resonance imaging interpretation.
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Sanghvi T, Boyum J, Spilseth B, Schat R, Estby H, and Taylor A
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- Humans, Liver diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular diagnostic imaging, Liver Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
- Abstract
Hepatocellular carcinoma is among the most prevalent solid organ cancers, and, unlike many cancers, may be diagnosed non-invasively by imaging criteria [1] with the preferred modality recently shifting from multiphasic computed tomography (MDCT) to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The purpose of this article is to help facilitate radiologists and radiology trainees in the transition to MRI by providing a step-wise approach to exam interpretation to improve the MRI detection of HCC. A methodical, consistent approach to navigating a HCC screening MRI exam, in conjunction with the LI-RADS framework for characterization, should lead to improved HCC detection and diagnosis.
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- 2018
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58. Predictors of exclusive breastfeeding across three time points in Bangladesh: an examination of the 2007, 2011 and 2014 Demographic and Health Survey.
- Author
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Blackstone SR and Sanghvi T
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Bangladesh, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Demography, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Middle Aged, Socioeconomic Factors, Young Adult, Breast Feeding statistics & numerical data, Mothers psychology, Mothers statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: The objective of this study was to explore predictors of exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) in Bangladesh using data from 2007, 2011 and 2014, specifically focusing on potential reasons why rates of EBF changed over those time periods., Methods: Data on mother/infant pairs with infants <6 months of age were examined at the three time points using the Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey. The EBF prevalence, changes in EBF since the previous survey and determinants of EBF at each time period were examined using t-tests, χ2 and multilevel logistic regression., Results: The prevalence of EBF was 42.5, 65 and 59.4% in 2007, 2011 and 2014, respectively. The age of the child was significantly associated with EBF across all time points. The largest changes in EBF occurred in the 3- to 5-month age group. Predictors of EBF in this specific age group were similar to overall predictors (e.g. age of the child and region). Participation of the mother in household decisions was a significant predictor in 2014., Conclusions: EBF prevalence in Bangladesh increased between 2007 and 2011 and then decreased between 2011 and 2014. The increase in 2011 may have been the result of widespread initiatives to promote EBF in that time frame. Due to the unexplained decrease in EBF between 2011 and 2014, there is still a need for interventions such as peer counselling, antenatal education and community awareness to promote EBF.
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- 2018
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59. Integrating Nutrition Interventions into an Existing Maternal, Neonatal, and Child Health Program Increased Maternal Dietary Diversity, Micronutrient Intake, and Exclusive Breastfeeding Practices in Bangladesh: Results of a Cluster-Randomized Program Evaluation.
- Author
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Nguyen PH, Kim SS, Sanghvi T, Mahmud Z, Tran LM, Shabnam S, Aktar B, Haque R, Afsana K, Frongillo EA, Ruel MT, and Menon P
- Subjects
- Adult, Bangladesh, Breast Feeding, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Malnutrition prevention & control, Nutritional Status, Pregnancy, Child Health Services, Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Diet classification, Maternal Health Services, Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Micronutrients administration & dosage
- Abstract
Background: Maternal undernutrition is a major concern globally, contributing to poor birth outcomes. Limited evidence exists on delivering multiple interventions for maternal nutrition simultaneously. Alive & Thrive addressed this gap by integrating nutrition-focused interpersonal counseling, community mobilization, distribution of free micronutrient supplements, and weight-gain monitoring through an existing Maternal, Neonatal, and Child Health (MNCH) program in Bangladesh. Objectives: We evaluated the effect of providing nutrition-focused MNCH compared with standard MNCH (antenatal care with standard nutrition counseling) on coverage of nutrition interventions, maternal dietary diversity, micronutrient supplement intake, and early breastfeeding practices. Methods: We used a cluster-randomized design with cross-sectional surveys at baseline (2015) and endline (2016) ( n ∼ 300 and 1000 pregnant or recently delivered women, respectively, per survey round). We derived difference-in-difference effect estimates, adjusted for geographic clustering and infant age and sex. Results: Coverage of interpersonal counseling was high; >90% of women in the nutrition-focused MNCH group were visited at home by health workers for maternal nutrition and breastfeeding counseling. The coverage of community mobilization activities was ∼50%. Improvements were significantly greater in the nutrition-focused MNCH group than in the standard MNCH group for consumption of iron and folic acid [effect: 9.8 percentage points (pp); 46 tablets] and calcium supplements (effect: 12.8 pp; 50 tablets). Significant impacts were observed for the number of food groups consumed (effect: 1.6 food groups), percentage of women who consumed ≥5 food groups/d (effect: 30.0 pp), and daily intakes of several micronutrients. A significant impact was also observed for exclusive breastfeeding (EBF; effect: 31 pp) but not for early initiation of breastfeeding. Conclusions: Addressing nutrition during pregnancy by delivering interpersonal counseling and community mobilization, providing free supplements, and ensuring weight-gain monitoring through an existing MNCH program improved maternal dietary diversity, micronutrient supplement consumption, and EBF practices. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT02745249., Competing Interests: Author disclosures: PHN, SSK, TS, ZM, LMT, SS, BA, RH, KA, EAF, MTR, and PM, no conflicts of interest. TS, ZM, SS, BA, and KA were members of the program implementation team that designed and implemented the interventions studied and reported on in this article. They reviewed the manuscript and provided contextual interpretation of the results, but final decisions on the manuscript content lay with the primary authors from the evaluation team (PHN, SSK, EAF, MTR, and PM). Alive & Thrive provided specific inputs to the manuscript regarding intervention design and provided feedback on the interpretation of results. Freedom to publish the study findings was protected contractually in the agreement between the respective funding sources and the International Food Policy Research Institute. This is an open access article distributed under the CC-BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
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- 2017
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60. Duplex Ultrasound Versus Clinical Surveillance in the Prediction of TIPS Malfunction Placed for Refractory Ascites: Is Ultrasound Surveillance Useful?
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Young S, Scanlon P, Sherestha P, Golzarian J, and Sanghvi T
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- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Recurrence, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Sensitivity and Specificity, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Ascites diagnostic imaging, Ascites surgery, Portasystemic Shunt, Transjugular Intrahepatic methods, Postoperative Complications diagnostic imaging, Ultrasonography, Doppler, Duplex methods
- Abstract
Purpose: Since the advent of expanded polytetrafluoroethylene-covered stents and the improved patency they confer for transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic shunt (TIPS), the need to perform ultrasound surveillance has been debated. Prior reports have failed to separately evaluate patients who had TIPS placed for refractory ascites and variceal bleeding. The difference in morbidity from TIPS malfunction between these cohorts argues for distinction between the two. This retrospective review aims to determine whether Duplex ultrasound or return of symptoms more accurately predicts TIPS dysfunction., Materials and Methods: Seventy-eight consecutive venograms in forty patients were retrospectively reviewed. TIPS venograms were used as the gold standard for TIPS dysfunction and considered abnormal if a pressure gradient >12 mmHg was discovered. Patients' charts were reviewed to assess for a return/worsening of ascites. Lastly, the two ultrasounds prior to TIPS revision were evaluated., Results: The sensitivities of symptom relapse and ultrasound were 83 and 80.0%, respectively, while the specificities were 38.7 and 4.0%, respectively. The sensitivities were not found to be statistically different (p > 0.05); however, symptom relapse was found to be statistically more specific (p < 0.05)., Conclusion: Symptom relapse is as sensitive and perhaps more specific than ultrasound in patients who had TIPS placed for refractory ascites.
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- 2017
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61. Abstract No. 468 - Multilevel epidural blood patch: a pictoral technique review
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Young, S., Sanghvi, T., and Quisling, R.
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- 2015
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62. What is the impact of removing performance-based financial incentives on community health worker motivation? A qualitative study from an infant and young child feeding program in Bangladesh.
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Glenn, Jeffrey, Moucheraud, Corrina, Payán, Denise Diaz, Crook, Allison, Stagg, James, Sarma, Haribondhu, Ahmed, Tahmeed, Epstein, Adrienne, Luies, Sharmin Khan, Rahman, Mahfuzur, Kruk, Margaret E., and Bossert, Thomas J.
- Subjects
COMMUNITY health workers ,MONETARY incentives ,INFANTS ,INCENTIVE (Psychology) ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) - Abstract
Background: Community health worker (CHW) motivation is an important factor related to health service quality and CHW program sustainability in low- and middle-income countries. Financial and non-financial motivators may influence CHW behavior through two dimensions of motivation: desire to perform and effort expended. The aim of this study was to explore how the removal of performance-based financial incentives impacted CHW motivation after formal funding ceased for Alive and Thrive (A&T), an infant and young child feeding (IYCF) program in Bangladesh.Methods: This qualitative study included seven focus groups (n = 43 respondents) with paid supervisors of volunteer CHWs tasked with delivering interpersonal IYCF counseling services. Data were transcribed, translated into English, and then analyzed using both a priori themes and a grounded theory approach.Results: Results suggest the removal of financial incentives was perceived to have negatively impacted CHWs' desire to perform in three primary ways: 1) a decreased desire to work without financial compensation, 2) changes in pre- and post-intervention motivation, and 3) household income challenges due to dependence on incentives. Removal of financial incentives was perceived to have negatively impacted CHWs' level of effort expended in four primary ways: 1) a reduction in CHW visits, 2) a reduction in quality of care, 3) CHW attrition, and 4) substitution of other income-generating activities.Conclusions: This study provides new evidence regarding how removing performance-based financial incentives from a CHW program can negatively impact CHW motivation. The findings suggest that program decision makers should consider how to construct community health work programs such that CHWs may continue to receive performance-based compensation after the original funding ceases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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63. Impact of Suaahara, an integrated nutrition programme, on maternal and child nutrition at scale in Nepal.
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Frongillo EA, Suresh S, Thapa DK, Cunningham K, Pandey Rana P, Adhikari RP, Kole S, Pun B, Kshetri I, Adhikari DP, and Klemm R
- Abstract
Suaahara was an innovative, complex, multi-sectoral, large-scale, nutrition programme in Nepal to increase exposure to nutrition-related information and services, improve nutrition-related knowledge and practices among pregnant women and mothers of infants and young children, and improve their nutrition. This study evaluated the effectiveness of Suaahara to improve nutrition and nutrition-related practices by comparing changes over 10 years between intervention and comparison districts. The samples of households at baseline in 2012 and endline in 2022 were 2040 and 2480, respectively, from 120 old wards. The impact was estimated using intent-to-treat regression models in which survey year, arm and their interaction were fixed effects, accounting for district clustering, with the interaction estimating differences between arms in changes over time. The intervention, relative to comparison, reduced maternal underweight by 8.43 percentage points (p < 0.001), consistent with improved maternal and fetal condition that was manifested as the greater length of 0.761 z-scores (p = 0.004) of infants 0-5.9 months. Complementary feeding practices with children between 6 and 23.9 months of age improved more in the intervention than comparison districts: child dietary diversity by 0.294 food groups (p = 0.072) and minimum dietary diversity by 9.51 percentage points (p = 0.028), feeding sick child more (p = 0.002) and administering oral rehydration solution and zinc for diarrhoea (p = 0.057) by about 17 percentage points each, and minimum meal frequency (p = 0.004) and minimum acceptable diet (p = 0.022) by about 15 percentage points each. Substantial impacts were demonstrated despite political restructuring, earthquakes, and other major challenges that Nepal and Suaahara faced and limitations in statistical power because of the reduced number of districts that then could be included in the study. Registered at clinicaltrials.gov with identifier NCT05448287., (© 2024 The Authors. Maternal & Child Nutrition published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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64. Cryoablation in the liver: how accurately does the iceball predict the ablation zone?
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Young S, Abamyan A, Goldberg D, Hannallah J, Schaub D, Kalarn S, Fitzgerald Z, and Woodhead G
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Cryosurgery methods, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular diagnostic imaging, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular surgery, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular pathology, Liver Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Liver Neoplasms surgery, Liver Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the accuracy with which the iceball predicts the realized ablation zone in patients undergoing cryoablation of the liver., Materials and Methods: Continuous patients who underwent cryoablation of primary or secondary malignancies of the liver were retrospectively reviewed. Iceball and ablation zone dimensions on 1 month follow up imaging were collected in three orientations, the long axis (LA), perpendicular transverse (PTR), and perpendicular craniocaudal (PCC). Factors which may predict differences in the measurements were evaluated with regression analysis. Oncologic outcomes were also collected., Results: The mean size of the iceball was 5.5 ± 1.1 cm, 3.9 ± 1.1 cm, and 4.4 ± 1.4 cm in the LA, PTR, and PCC orientations, respectively. The mean size of the one-month ablation cavity was 4.3 ± 1.3 cm, 3 ± 1.1 cm, and 3 ± 1.3 cm in the LA, PTR, and PCC orientations, respectively. The iceball was significantly larger than the ablation zone in all orientations (p < 0.001). When comparing HCC and non-HCC patients the Kaplan-Meier analysis of TTLP, the Kaplan Meier curves deviated significantly (p = 0.015, HR 2.26 (95%CI 1.17-4.37)). When a similar analysis was performed looking at TTP again the curves diverged significantly (p = 0.002, HR 2.4 (95%CI 1.37-4.19))., Conclusion: The iceball seems to overestimate the realized ablation zone by about 1 cm in all orientations during hepatic cryoablation., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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65. Using behavior change approaches to improve complementary feeding practices.
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Sanghvi T, Seidel R, Baker J, and Jimerson A
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- Bangladesh, Counseling, Developing Countries, Diet, Feeding Behavior, Health Education, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Health Plan Implementation, Health Promotion, Humans, Infant, Malawi, Mothers, Nutrition Policy, Peru, Preventive Health Services, Zambia, Behavior Therapy methods, Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
- Abstract
This paper applies an implementation framework, based on a behavior change model, to compare four case studies of complementary feeding programs. It aims to expand our understanding of how to design and implement behavior change interventions aimed at improving complementary feeding practices. Four programs met the selection criteria of scale and documented improvements: Bangladesh, Malawi, Peru, and Zambia. We examined commonalities and differences in the design and implementation of social and behavior change approaches, use of program delivery platforms, challenges encountered, and lessons learned. We conclude that complementary feeding practices, in particular dietary diversity, can be improved rapidly in a variety of settings using available program platforms if interventions focus on specific constraints to food access and use effective strategies to encourage caregivers to prepare and feed appropriate foods. A five-step process is presented that can be applied across a range of complementary feeding programs to strengthen their impacts., (© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2017
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66. Factors influencing maternal nutrition practices in a large scale maternal, newborn and child health program in Bangladesh.
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Nguyen PH, Sanghvi T, Kim SS, Tran LM, Afsana K, Mahmud Z, Aktar B, and Menon P
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- Adolescent, Bangladesh, Calcium administration & dosage, Calcium pharmacology, Diet, Dietary Supplements, Female, Folic Acid administration & dosage, Folic Acid pharmacology, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Iron administration & dosage, Iron pharmacology, Tablets, Young Adult, Child Health, Maternal Health, Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
- Abstract
Improving maternal nutrition practices during pregnancy is essential to save lives and improve health outcomes for both mothers and babies. This paper examines the maternal, household, and health service factors influencing maternal nutrition practices in the context of a large scale maternal, newborn, and child health (MNCH) program in Bangladesh. Data were from a household survey of pregnant (n = 600) and recently delivered women (n = 2,000). Multivariate linear and logistic regression analyses were used to examine the determinants of three outcomes: consumption of iron and folic acid (IFA) tablets, calcium tablets, and diverse diets. Women consumed 94 ± 68 IFA and 82 ± 66 calcium tablets (out of 180 as recommended) during pregnancy, and only half of them consumed an adequately diverse diet. Good nutrition knowledge was the key maternal factor associated with higher consumption of IFA (β = 32.5, 95% CI: 19.5, 45.6) and calcium tablets (β ~31.9, 95% CI: 20.9, 43.0) and diverse diet (OR = 1.8, 95% CI: 1.0-3.1), compared to poor knowledge. Women's self-efficacy in achieving the recommended practices and perception of enabling social norms were significantly associated with dietary diversity. At the household level, women who reported a high level of husband's support were more likely to consume IFA (β = 25.0, 95% CI: 18.0, 32.1) and calcium (β = 26.6, 95% CI: 19.4, 33.7) tablets and diverse diet (OR = 1.9, 95% CI: 1.2, 3.3), compared to those who received low support. Health service factors associated with higher intakes of IFA and calcium tablets were early and more prenatal care visits and receipt of free supplements. Combined exposure to several of these factors was attributed to the consumption of an additional 46 IFA and 53 calcium tablets and 17% higher proportions of women consuming diverse diets. Our study shows that improving knowledge, self-efficacy and perceptions of social norms among pregnant women, and increasing husbands' support, early registration in prenatal care, and provision of free supplements will largely improve maternal nutrition practices.
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- 2017
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67. The nutrition and health risks faced by pregnant adolescents: Insights from a cross-sectional study in Bangladesh.
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Nguyen PH, Sanghvi T, Tran LM, Afsana K, Mahmud Z, Aktar B, Haque R, and Menon P
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- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Bangladesh epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Nutritional Status, Postnatal Care statistics & numerical data, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications epidemiology, Prenatal Care statistics & numerical data, Young Adult, Pregnancy in Adolescence statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Little is known about nutrition and well-being indicators of pregnant adolescents and the availability and use of nutrition interventions delivered through maternal, newborn, and child health (MNCH) programs. This study compared the differences between pregnant adolescents and adult pregnant women in services received, and in maternal and child nutrition and health conditions. A survey of 2,000 recently delivered women with infants <6 months of age was carried out in 20 sub-districts in Bangladesh where MNCH program is being implemented. Differences in service use and outcomes between pregnant adolescents and adult women were tested using multivariate regression models. The coverage of antenatal care and nutrition services was similar for adolescent and adult mothers. Compared to adult mothers, adolescent mothers had significantly fewer ownership of assets and lower decision making power. Adolescent mothers weighed significantly less than adult women (45.8 vs 47.1 kg, p = 0.001), and their body mass index was significantly lower (19.7 vs 21.3, p = 0.001). Adolescents recovered later and with greater difficulty after childbirth. Infants of adolescent mothers had significant lower height-for-age z-score (-0.89 vs -0.74, p = 0.04), lower weight-for age z-score (-1.21 vs -1.08, p = 0.02) and higher underweight prevalence (22.4% vs 17.9%, p = 0.04) compared to infants of adult women. In conclusion, this study confirms that adolescent pregnancy poses substantial risks for maternal and infant outcomes, and emphasizes that these risks are significant even where services during pregnancy are available and accessed. A focus on preventing adolescent pregnancy is imperative, while also strengthening health and nutrition services for all pregnant women, whether adult or adolescent.
- Published
- 2017
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68. Provision versus promotion to develop a handwashing station: the effect on desired handwashing behavior.
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Biswas D, Nizame FA, Sanghvi T, Roy S, Luby SP, and Unicomb LE
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- Adult, Bangladesh, Health Behavior, Humans, Male, Prevalence, Soaps, Water, Caregivers, Hand Disinfection, Motivation
- Abstract
Background: Diarrhea prevalence increases from around the time that complementary foods are introduced. Improving caregiver's hand hygiene during food preparation could reduce complementary food contamination and enteric pathogen transmission. Washing hands with soap is more common when water and soap are together at a convenient location. We conducted a three-month pilot intervention to evaluate two options for setting up handwashing stations: i) provide a handwashing station, or ii) help the family to make their own from available materials. Additionally, we assessed the feasibility of this intervention to be integrated with a child feeding program., Methods: We conducted the intervention among two groups; 40 households received a free of cost handwashing station and another 40 households were motivated to place their own soap/soapy-water and water vessel near the food preparation and child feeding area. Community health workers encouraged caregivers to wash hands with soap/soapy-water before food preparation and feeding a child. They either assisted study participants to install the study-provided handwashing station at the recommended place or encouraged caregivers to develop their own. Field researchers assessed placement and composition of handwashing stations and the feasibility of integrating handwashing and nutrition messages., Results: By end of the trial, 39/40 households developed their own handwashing station, comprising a bucket, mug and bar soap/soapy-water of which 60% (6/10) households were observed with a functional and complete handwashing station set. Observed handwashing with soap was detected among 8/10 households from the study-provided handwashing station group and 5/10 among households who had made their own handwashing station. Sixty-seven of the 76 caregivers recalled integrated intervention messages on social and health benefits of infant and young child feeding correctly; and all recalled key handwashing with soap times, before food preparation and feeding a child., Conclusion: Encouraging households to develop their own handwashing station with soap and water to place at a food preparation/child feeding location is feasible over the short term. In the absence of large-scale provision of handwashing stations, caregivers can be encouraged to create and use their own. Integrating handwashing with soap into a nutrition intervention was feasible and acceptable and should be considered by policy makers.
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- 2017
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69. Large-Scale Behavior-Change Initiative for Infant and Young Child Feeding Advanced Language and Motor Development in a Cluster-Randomized Program Evaluation in Bangladesh.
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Frongillo EA, Nguyen PH, Saha KK, Sanghvi T, Afsana K, Haque R, Baker J, Ruel MT, Rawat R, and Menon P
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- Bangladesh, Child, Preschool, Female, Health Behavior, Humans, Infant, Male, Child Health Services standards, Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Developing Countries, Language Development, Nutritional Status
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Background: Promoting adequate nutrition through interventions to improve infant and young child feeding (IYCF) has the potential to contribute to child development., Objective: We examined whether an intensive intervention package that was aimed at improving IYCF at scale through the Alive & Thrive initiative in Bangladesh also advanced language and gross motor development, and whether advancements in language and gross motor development were explained through improved complementary feeding., Methods: A cluster-randomized design compared 2 intervention packages: intensive interpersonal counseling on IYCF, mass media campaign, and community mobilization (intensive) compared with usual nutrition counseling and mass media campaign (nonintensive). Twenty subdistricts were randomly assigned to receive either the intensive or the nonintensive intervention. Household surveys were conducted at baseline (2010) and at endline (2014) in the same communities (n = ∼4000 children aged 0-47.9 mo for each round). Child development was measured by asking mothers if their child had reached each of multiple milestones, with some observed. Linear regression accounting for clustering was used to derive difference-in-differences (DID) impact estimates, and path analysis was used to examine developmental advancement through indicators of improved IYCF and other factors., Results: The DID in language development between intensive and nonintensive groups was 1.05 milestones (P = 0.001) among children aged 6-23.9 mo and 0.76 milestones (P = 0.038) among children aged 24-47.9 mo. For gross motor development, the DID was 0.85 milestones (P = 0.035) among children aged 6-23.9 mo. The differences observed corresponded to age- and sex-adjusted effect sizes of 0.35 for language and 0.23 for gross motor development. Developmental advancement at 6-23.9 mo was partially explained through improved minimum dietary diversity and the consumption of iron-rich food., Conclusions: Intensive IYCF intervention differentially advanced language and gross motor development, which was partially explained through improved complementary feeding. Measuring a diverse set of child outcomes, including functional outcomes such as child development, is important when evaluating integrated nutrition programs. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01678716., (© 2017 American Society for Nutrition.)
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- 2017
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70. The effectiveness of a hospital-based program to promote exclusive breast-feeding among low-income women in Brazil.
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Lutter, C K, primary, Perez-Escamilla, R, additional, Segall, A, additional, Sanghvi, T, additional, Teruya, K, additional, and Wickham, C, additional
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- 1997
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71. Identification of risk factors for short breastfeeding duration in Mexico city through survival analysis12
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Perez‐Escamilla, R., primary, Lutter, C.K., additional, Wickham, C., additional, Phillips, M., additional, Treviño‐Siller, S., additional, and Sanghvi, T., additional
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- 1997
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72. Aggressive angiomyxoma: case report and review of the literature.
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Benson JC, Gilles S, Sanghvi T, Boyum J, and Niendorf E
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A 47-year-old female presented to clinic with a 5-year history of a left buttock mass. The patient's hemoglobin was low (9.7 g/dL); laboratory analysis was otherwise unremarkable. Ultrasound of the left gluteal region demonstrated a heterogeneous vascular solid lesion. Magnetic resonance and computed tomography imaging showed an enhancing mass extending from the left ischioanal fossa through the levator ani muscle into the pelvis. Biopsy revealed bland-appearing spindle-shaped cells positive for estrogen and progesterone receptors, consistent with an aggressive angiomyxoma. The mass was surgically excised without complication. To date, follow-up imaging has not demonstrated evidence of tumor recurrence.
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- 2016
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73. Impacts on Breastfeeding Practices of At-Scale Strategies That Combine Intensive Interpersonal Counseling, Mass Media, and Community Mobilization: Results of Cluster-Randomized Program Evaluations in Bangladesh and Viet Nam.
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Menon P, Nguyen PH, Saha KK, Khaled A, Kennedy A, Tran LM, Sanghvi T, Hajeebhoy N, Baker J, Alayon S, Afsana K, Haque R, Frongillo EA, Ruel MT, and Rawat R
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- Adolescent, Adult, Bangladesh, Cluster Analysis, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Information Dissemination, Program Evaluation, Vietnam, Young Adult, Breast Feeding statistics & numerical data, Community Participation, Counseling, Health Communication standards, Mass Media
- Abstract
Background: Despite recommendations supporting optimal breastfeeding, the number of women practicing exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) remains low, and few interventions have demonstrated implementation and impact at scale. Alive & Thrive was implemented over a period of 6 y (2009-2014) and aimed to improve breastfeeding practices through intensified interpersonal counseling (IPC), mass media (MM), and community mobilization (CM) intervention components delivered at scale in the context of policy advocacy (PA) in Bangladesh and Viet Nam. In Bangladesh, IPC was delivered through a large non-governmental health program; in Viet Nam, it was integrated into government health facilities. This study evaluated the population-level impact of intensified IPC, MM, CM, and PA (intensive) compared to standard nutrition counseling and less intensive MM, CM, and PA (non-intensive) on breastfeeding practices in these two countries., Methods and Findings: A cluster-randomized evaluation design was employed in each country. For the evaluation sample, 20 sub-districts in Bangladesh and 40 communes in Viet Nam were randomized to either the intensive or the non-intensive group. Cross-sectional surveys (n ~ 500 children 0-5.9 mo old per group per country) were implemented at baseline (June 7-August 29, 2010, in Viet Nam; April 28-June 26, 2010, in Bangladesh) and endline (June 16-August 30, 2014, in Viet Nam; April 20-June 23, 2014, in Bangladesh). Difference-in-differences estimates (DDEs) of impact were calculated, adjusting for clustering. In Bangladesh, improvements were significantly greater in the intensive compared to the non-intensive group for the proportion of women who reported practicing EBF in the previous 24 h (DDE 36.2 percentage points [pp], 95% CI 21.0-51.5, p < 0.001; prevalence in intensive group rose from 48.5% to 87.6%) and engaging in early initiation of breastfeeding (EIBF) (16.7 pp, 95% CI 2.8-30.6, p = 0.021; 63.7% to 94.2%). In Viet Nam, EBF increases were greater in the intensive group (27.9 pp, 95% CI 17.7-38.1, p < 0.001; 18.9% to 57.8%); EIBF declined (60.0% to 53.2%) in the intensive group, but less than in the non-intensive group (57.4% to 40.6%; DDE 10.0 pp, 95% CI -1.3 to 21.4, p = 0.072). Our impact estimates may underestimate the full potential of such a multipronged intervention because the evaluation lacked a "pure control" area with no MM or national/provincial PA., Conclusions: At-scale interventions combining intensive IPC with MM, CM, and PA had greater positive impacts on breastfeeding practices in Bangladesh and Viet Nam than standard counseling with less intensive MM, CM, and PA. To our knowledge, this study is the first to document implementation and impacts of breastfeeding promotion at scale using rigorous evaluation designs. Strategies to design and deliver similar programs could improve breastfeeding practices in other contexts., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01678716 (Bangladesh) and NCT01676623 (Viet Nam)., Competing Interests: JB, TS, NH, SA, KA and RH are part of the Alive and Thrive implementation team who delivered the interventions described in this paper. They helped conceive and design the study, but played no role in research data collection or data analysis. Their contributions to this manuscript included written inputs to sections on intervention design, critical in-person discussions regarding interpretation of results, and written review of manuscript drafts. Final decisions about results to include, interpretation and conclusions rested with authors from the evaluation team (PM, RR, EAF, MR, PN, KKS, AKh, AKn, LTM).
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- 2016
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74. Combining Intensive Counseling by Frontline Workers with a Nationwide Mass Media Campaign Has Large Differential Impacts on Complementary Feeding Practices but Not on Child Growth: Results of a Cluster-Randomized Program Evaluation in Bangladesh.
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Menon P, Nguyen PH, Saha KK, Khaled A, Sanghvi T, Baker J, Afsana K, Haque R, Frongillo EA, Ruel MT, and Rawat R
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- Bangladesh, Child, Preschool, Cluster Analysis, Cross-Sectional Studies, Family Characteristics, Humans, Infant, Infant Food, Nutritional Status, Program Evaluation, Rural Population, Socioeconomic Factors, Treatment Outcome, Counseling, Diet, Health Promotion methods, Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Mass Media
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Background: Complementary feeding (CF) contributes to child growth and development, but few CF programs are delivered at scale. Alive & Thrive addressed this in Bangladesh through intensified interpersonal counseling (IPC), mass media (MM), and community mobilization (CM)., Objective: The objective was to evaluate the impact of providing IPC + MM + CM (intensive) compared with standard nutrition counseling + less intensive MM + CM (nonintensive) on CF practices and anthropometric measurements., Methods: We used a cluster-randomized, nonblinded evaluation with cross-sectional surveys [n = ∼600 and 1090 children 6-23.9 mo and 24-47.9 mo/group, respectively, at baseline (2010) and n = ∼500 and 1100 children of the same age, respectively, at endline (2014)]. We derived difference-in-difference impact estimates (DDEs), adjusting for geographic clustering, infant age, sex, differences in baseline characteristics, and differential change in characteristics over time., Results: Groups were similar at baseline. CF improvements were significantly greater in the intensive than in the nonintensive group [DDEs: 16.3, 14.7, 22.0, and 24.6 percentage points (pp) for minimum dietary diversity, minimum meal frequency, minimum acceptable diet, and consumption of iron-rich foods, respectively]. In the intensive group, CF practices were high: 50.4% for minimum acceptable diet, 63.8% for minimum diet diversity, 75.1% for minimum meal frequency, and 78.5% for consumption of iron-rich foods. Timely introduction of foods improved. Significant, nondifferential stunting declines occurred in intensive (6.2 pp) and nonintensive (5.2 pp) groups in children 24-47.9 mo., Conclusions: The intensive program substantially improved CF practices compared with the nonintensive program. Large-scale program delivery was feasible and, with the use of multiple platforms, reached 1.7 million households. Nondifferential impacts on stunting were likely due to rapid positive secular trends in Bangladesh. Accelerating linear growth further could require accompanying interventions. This study establishes proof of concept for large-scale behavior change interventions to improve child feeding. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01678716., Competing Interests: 2 Author disclosures: T Sanghvi, J Baker, K Afsana, and R Haque were members of the program implementation team that designed and implemented the interventions studied and reported on in this manuscript. They reviewed the manuscript and provided contextual interpretation of the results, but final decisions for manuscript content lay with the primary authors from the evaluation team. P Menon, PH Nguyen, KK Saha, A Khaled, EA Frongillo, MT Reul, and R Rawat, no conflicts of interest. The Gates foundation and Alive & Thrive participated in the study design choices; neither participated in the data collection, or analysis. Alive & Thrive provided specific written input to the manuscript on intervention design and scale and provided feedback on interpretation of the results. Alive & Thrive and the Gates Foundation gave extensive feedback at all stages of the project, but freedom to publish the study findings was protected contractually in the agreement between the respective funding sources and the International Food Policy Research Institute. All final decisions on the manuscript were made by the researchers.
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- 2016
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75. Achieving behaviour change at scale: Alive & Thrive's infant and young child feeding programme in Bangladesh.
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Sanghvi T, Haque R, Roy S, Afsana K, Seidel R, Islam S, Jimerson A, and Baker J
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- Bangladesh, Breast Feeding, Female, Hand Disinfection, Health Education methods, Health Promotion methods, Humans, Hygiene, Infant, Mothers, Nutrition Surveys, Behavior Therapy, Child Health Services, Feeding Behavior, Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Maternal Behavior
- Abstract
The Alive & Thrive programme scaled up infant and young child feeding interventions in Bangladesh from 2010 to 2014. In all, 8.5 million mothers benefited. Approaches - including improved counselling by frontline health workers during home visits; community mobilization; mass media campaigns reaching mothers, fathers and opinion leaders; and policy advocacy - led to rapid and significant improvements in key practices related to breastfeeding and complementary feeding. (Evaluation results are forthcoming.) Intervention design was based on extensive formative research and behaviour change theory and principles and was tailored to the local context. The programme focused on small, achievable actions for key audience segments identified through rigorous testing. Promotion strategies took into account underlying behavioural determinants and reached a high per cent of the priority groups through repeated contacts. Community volunteers received monetary incentives for mothers in their areas who practised recommended behaviours. Programme monitoring, midterm surveys and additional small studies to answer questions led to ongoing adjustments. Scale-up was achieved through streamlining of tools and strategies, government branding, phased expansion through BRAC - a local non-governmental implementing partner with an extensive community-based platform - and nationwide mainstreaming through multiple non-governmental organization and government programmes. Key messages Well-designed and well-implemented large-scale interventions that combine interpersonal counselling, community mobilization, advocacy, mass communication and strategic use of data have great potential to improve IYCF practices rapidly. Formative research and ongoing studies are essential to tailor strategies to the local context and to the perspectives of mothers, family members, influential community members and policymakers. Continued use of data to adjust programme elements is also central to the process. Scale-up can be facilitated through strategic selection of partners with existing community-based platforms and through mass media, where a high proportion of the target audience can be reached through communication channels such as broadcast media. Sustaining the impacts will involve commitments from government and capacity building. The next step for capacity building would involve understanding barriers and constraints and then coming up with appropriate strategies to address them. One of the limitations we experienced was rapid transition of staff in key positions of implementing agencies, in government leadership, donors and other stakeholders. There was a need for continued advocacy, orientation and teaching related to strategic programme design, behaviour change, effective implementation and use of data., (© 2016 The Authors. Maternal & Child Nutrition published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2016
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76. Diagnostic accuracy of 3D color volume-rendered CT images for peroneal tendon dislocation in patients with acute calcaneal fractures.
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Ohashi K, Sanghvi T, El-Khoury GY, Ahn JM, Bennett DL, Geijer M, Inaoka T, and Berbaum K
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- Acute Disease, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Color, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Observer Variation, Radiographic Image Enhancement methods, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Young Adult, Ankle Fractures diagnostic imaging, Calcaneus diagnostic imaging, Calcaneus injuries, Imaging, Three-Dimensional methods, Joint Dislocations diagnostic imaging, Tendon Injuries diagnostic imaging, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods
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Background: Use of three-dimensional (3D) color volume-rendered (VR) images has been reported to be more time-efficient compared to that of cross-sectional computed tomography (CT) images for the diagnosis of peroneal tendon dislocation. However, the diagnostic performance of this technique has not been studied., Purpose: To test diagnostic accuracy of 3D color VR CT images of ankle for peroneal tendon dislocation in patients with acute calcaneal fractures., Material and Methods: The study consisted of 121 ankle CT studies from 105 consecutive patients (85 men, 20 women; mean age, 42 years; age range, 16-75 years) with acute calcaneal fractures. Peroneal tendon dislocation was diagnosed on multiplanar CT images by consensus of two experienced musculoskeletal radiologists, which served as the reference standard. Three other musculoskeletal radiologists independently reviewed 3D images alone on a workstation. The readers determined whether or not there was peroneal tendon dislocation using three degrees of certainty (definite, probable, and possible). Diagnostic performance of 3D images for peroneal tendon dislocation was evaluated by calculating the sensitivities, specificities, and area under the receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curves., Results: Forty-eight (40%) out of 121 studies showed peroneal tendon dislocation based on the expert readings using multiplanar reformatted images. Sensitivities/specificities of 3D images measured 0.92/0.81, 0.88/0.90, and 0.81/0.92 for three readers, respectively. The area under the proper binormal ROC curve based on all three readers (0.93, 0.94, and 0.92) measured 0.93 with a 95% confidence interval of 0.89-0.98., Conclusion: Diagnostic accuracy of 3D images is comparable to, but not as good as that of MPR images for the diagnosis of peroneal tendon dislocation in patients with acute calcaneal fractures., (© The Foundation Acta Radiologica 2014 Reprints and permissions: sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav.)
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- 2015
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77. Hygienic practice during complementary feeding and associated factors among mothers of children aged 6-24 months in Borecha Woreda, southwestern Ethiopia: a community-based cross-sectional study.
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Birdida, Rabira Tariku, Malka, Erean Shigign, Kush, Efrem Negash, and Alemu, Fikadu Tolesa
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- 2024
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78. Income and education disparities in childhood malnutrition: a multi-country decomposition analysis.
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Ijaiya, Mukhtar A., Anjorin, Seun, and Uthman, Olalekan A.
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POOR children ,INCOME ,CHILD nutrition ,HEALTH behavior ,MATERNAL age - Abstract
Introduction: Childhood malnutrition is a complex issue with a range of contributing factors. The consequences of malnutrition are severe, particularly for children. This study aims to identify the factors contributing to inequality gaps in childhood malnutrition. Our study provides insights into modifiable elements to inform interventions targeted at distinct contexts and populations to improve child nutrition. Methods: This study utilized data from the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) of 27 countries. First, the risk differences (RDs) between the prevalence of childhood malnutrition among the determinant variables, household income, and maternal education categories were calculated. The Blinder‒Oaxaca decomposition was subsequently used to determine the extent to which the difference in childhood malnutrition prevalence between low-income and high-income groups and maternal education levels results from the contributory effects of the explanatory variables: child and maternal individual-level compositional factors. Results: We examined data from 138,782 children in 27 countries from 2015 to 2020. The prevalence of childhood malnutrition (10.5%) varied across countries, ranging from 6.5% in Burundi to 29.5% in Timor Leste. On average, the prevalence of childhood malnutrition was 11.0% in low-income households and 10.7% among mothers without education. Some nations had pro-low-income (i.e., malnutrition concentrated among children from poor households) or pro-no-maternal education (i.e., malnutrition concentrated among children from mothers with no formal education) inequality in childhood malnutrition, but most did not. We found a complex interplay of compositional effects, such as the child's age, maternal education, maternal health behavior, and place of residence, that influence the inequality in childhood malnutrition rates across 10 pro-low-income countries. In addition, we also found that a complex mix of compositional effects, such as the household wealth index, maternal health behavior, and maternal age, contribute to childhood malnutrition inequality between educated and uneducated mothers across the 7 pro-no maternal education countries. Conclusion: The prevalence of childhood malnutrition varies among low-income, high-income, and no maternal education-maternal education groups. This study highlights the need for a country-specific approach to addressing childhood malnutrition, with policies and interventions tailored to each country's specific context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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79. Undernutrition and dietary diversity score and associated factors among lactating mothers in Northwest Ethiopia.
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Belay, Mahider Awoke
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- 2024
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80. Impact of early continuous positive airway pressure in the delivery room (DR-CPAP) on neonates < 1500 g in a low-resource setting: a protocol for a pilot feasibility and acceptability randomized controlled trial.
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Burgoine, Kathy, Ssenkusu, John M., Nakiyemba, Alice, Okello, Francis, Napyo, Agnes, Hagmann, Cornelia, Namuyonga, Judith, Hewitt-Smith, Adam, Martha, Muduwa, Loe, Kate, Grace, Abongo, Denis, Amorut, Wandabwa, Julius, and Olupot-Olupot, Peter
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CONTINUOUS positive airway pressure ,RESPIRATORY distress syndrome ,RESOURCE-limited settings ,MEDICAL personnel ,ARTIFICIAL respiration ,PREMATURE labor ,MECONIUM aspiration syndrome - Abstract
Background: Preterm birth is the leading cause of childhood mortality, and respiratory distress syndrome is the predominant cause of these deaths. Early continuous positive airway pressure is effective in high-resource settings, reducing the rate of continuous positive airway pressure failure, and the need for mechanical ventilation and surfactant. However, most deaths in preterm infants occur in low-resource settings without access to mechanical ventilation or surfactant. We hypothesize that in such settings, early continuous positive airway pressure will reduce the rate of failure and therefore preterm mortality. Methods: This is a mixed methods feasibility and acceptability, single-center pilot randomized control trial of early continuous positive airway pressure among infants with birthweight 800–1500 g. There are two parallel arms: (i) application of continuous positive airway pressure; with optional oxygen when indicated; applied in the delivery room within 15 min of birth; transitioning to bubble continuous positive airway pressure after admission to the neonatal unit if Downes Score ≥ 4 (intervention), (ii) supplementary oxygen at delivery when indicated; transitioning to bubble continuous positive airways pressure after admission to the neonatal unit if Downes Score ≥ 4 (control). A two-stage consent process (verbal consent during labor, followed by full written consent within 24 h of birth) and a low-cost third-party allocation process for randomization will be piloted. We will use focus group discussions and key informant interviews to explore the acceptability of the intervention, two-stage consent process, and trial design. We will interview healthcare workers, mothers, and caregivers of preterm infants. Feasibility will be assessed by the proportion of infants randomized within 15 min of delivery; the proportion of infants in the intervention arm receiving CPAP within 15 min of delivery; and the proportion of infants with primary and secondary outcomes measured successfully. Discussion: This pilot trial will enhance our understanding of methods and techniques that can enable emergency neonatal research to be carried out effectively, affordably, and acceptably in low-resource settings. This mixed-methods approach will allow a comprehensive exploration of parental and healthcare worker perceptions, experiences, and acceptance of the intervention and trial design. Trial registration: The study is registered on the Pan African Clinical Trials Registry (PACTR) PACTR202208462613789. Registered 08 August 2022. https://pactr.samrc.ac.za/TrialDisplay.aspx?TrialID=23888. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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81. Dietary Behaviour of Pregnant Women in Ethiopia: The Missing Aspect of Care.
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Alamirew, Simegn Kassa, Lemke, Stefanie, Freyer, Bernhard, and Stadlmayr, Barbara
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Background: Nutrition and adequate dietary intake during pregnancy strongly influence the health and well-being of the mother, as well as the physical and cognitive development of the unborn child. While previous studies have documented factors associated with the dietary behaviour of pregnant women in Ethiopia, a comprehensive overview is missing. Objective: The aim of this study was to close this research gap. Methodology: We conducted a mapping review, including 37 studies published between 2000 and 2022 in our analysis. Dietary behaviour refers to all phenomena related to food choice, eating behaviour and dietary intake. We used an innovative approach by integrating a socio-ecological framework with UNICEF's conceptual framework on maternal and child nutrition, which specifies multidimensional individual, underlying and enabling determinants associated with the nutritional status of women. Importantly, we integrated a focus on care for women and healthy environments. Results: A total of 68 factors were identified as influencing the dietary behaviour of pregnant women, with a focus on the intra- (31/68) and interpersonal (21/68) levels, while factors at the community (11/68) and the institutional levels (5/68) were scarce. Few studies investigated socio-cultural aspects, such as gender roles, decision-making power and workload of women, psychological factors and eating practices related to food taboos. None of the studies explored the influence of resources at the institutional level. Conclusions: This attests that the focus in maternal nutrition is still placed on the individual responsibility of women, instead of addressing the structural conditions that would enable women to access resources such as land, education and nutrition information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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82. Epidemiology, pathophysiology and clinical aspects of Hepatocellular Carcinoma in MAFLD patients.
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Argenziano, Maria Eva, Kim, Mi Na, Montori, Michele, Di Bucchianico, Alessandro, Balducci, Daniele, Ahn, Sang Hoon, and Svegliati Baroni, Gianluca
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Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is undergoing a transformative shift, with metabolic-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD) emerging as a dominant etiology. Diagnostic criteria for MAFLD involve hepatic steatosis and metabolic dysregulation. Globally, MAFLD prevalence stands at 38.77%, significantly linked to the escalating rates of obesity. Epidemiological data indicate a dynamic shift in the major etiologies of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), transitioning from viral to metabolic liver diseases. Besides the degree of liver fibrosis, several modifiable lifestyle risk factors, such as type 2 diabetes, obesity, alcohol use, smoking, and HBV, HCV infection contribute to the pathogenesis of HCC. Moreover gut microbiota and genetic variants may contribute to HCC development. The pathophysiological link between MAFLD and HCC involves metabolic dysregulation, impairing glucose and lipid metabolism, inflammation and oxidative stress. Silent presentation poses challenges in early MAFLD-HCC diagnosis. Imaging, biopsy, and AI-assisted techniques aid diagnosis, while HCC surveillance in non-cirrhotic MAFLD patients remains debated. ITA.LI.CA. group proposes a survival-based algorithm for treatment based on Barcelona clinic liver cancer (BCLC) algorithm. Liver resection, transplantation, ablation, and locoregional therapies are applied based on the disease stage. Systemic treatments is promising, with initial immunotherapy results indicating a less favorable response in MAFLD-related HCC. Adopting lifestyle interventions and chemopreventive measures with medications, including aspirin, metformin, and statins, constitute promising approaches for the primary prevention of HCC. Prognosis is influenced by multiple factors, with MAFLD-HCC associated with prolonged survival. Emerging diagnostic biomarkers and epigenomic markers, show promising results for early HCC detection in the MAFLD population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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83. A formative study of the sociocultural influences on dietary behaviours during pregnancy in rural Bangladesh.
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Khaled, Nazrana, Kalbarczyk, Anna, Zavala, Eleonor, Rahman, Atiya, de Boer, Mary, Chakraborty, Barnali, Rahman, Hafizur, Ali, Hasmot, Haque, Rezwanul, Ayesha, Kaniz, Siddiqua, Towfida J., Afsana, Kaosar, Christian, Parul, and Thorne‐Lyman, Andrew L.
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HEALTH literacy ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL factors ,CULTURE ,DAIRY products ,NUTRITION counseling ,FOOD security ,PREGNANT women ,NUTRITIONAL requirements ,FOOD habits ,RURAL conditions ,HEALTH behavior ,VEGETABLES ,DIETARY proteins ,ENRICHED foods ,HEALTH promotion ,FAMILY support ,DIETARY supplements ,ACCESS to information - Abstract
Balanced energy protein supplementation (BEP) is recommended for contexts of high maternal undernutrition by the World Health Organization. Despite recent improvements in undernutrition, Bangladesh remains a context where BEP could help accelerate progress towards nutrition goals. In preparation for an effective trial testing a fortified BEP, a qualitative study was undertaken to better understand sociocultural factors influencing dietary behaviours in pregnancy. Married women of reproductive age (n = 23), their husbands (n = 6) and mothers‐in‐law (n = 6) were interviewed, and focus group discussions were conducted with women (n = 4). Women had a clear understanding of which nutritious foods are important to consume during pregnancy, including green leafy vegetables, dairy and other animal‐source foods. Many explained affordability as a barrier to consuming those foods with the desired frequency. Women acquired information about diet and nutrition in pregnancy from community health workers as well as other women in the community. Most preferred to seek information from their own networks before formal health care providers. Women and husbands generally had positive views about micronutrient supplements, although some mothers‐in‐law were more hesitant. Some food taboos relating to the consumption of certain foods like duck and pigeon meat persist, mainly stemming from concerns for the unborn child. Opportunities exist to build on existing perceptions of healthy diets, potentially framing food or nutrient supplements as a beneficial 'add‐on' to promote a healthy pregnancy. There is a scope to strengthen nutrition counselling, especially for the family members, to dispel myths and misconceptions and promote dietary and other support for pregnant women. Key messages: Women in this part of rural Bangladesh understood which foods were beneficial for health and nutrition during pregnancy and the importance of increasing food intake during pregnancy.Women and husbands were more likely to view nutrition supplements as beneficial during pregnancy; some mothers‐in‐law expressed reservations about supplements.In the context of a planned effectiveness trial of balanced‐energy and protein supplementation, nutrition education should reinforce existing concepts of the importance of healthy diets during pregnancy and build on them to promote the use of nutritious supplements to meet nutrient needs in pregnancy.Financial constraints limit access to nutritious food and micronutrient supplements in pregnancy despite widespread beliefs about their value. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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84. A novel ChatGPT-based multimodel framework for tourism review mining: a case study on China's five sacred mountains.
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Cheng, Xinquan, Chen, Yuanhong, Wang, Pingfan, Zhou, YanXi, Wei, Xiaojing, Luo, Wenjiang, and Duan, Qingxin
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Copyright of Journal of Hospitality & Tourism Technology is the property of Emerald Publishing Limited and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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85. Effectiveness of Video‐Based Health Education on Breastfeeding Practices Among Infants Aged 0–6 Months in Dirashe District, South Ethiopia: A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Boynito, Wanzahun Godana, Diongue, Ousmane, Temesgen, Kidus, Yeshitila, Yordanos Gizachew, Tessema, Godana Yaya, De Souza, Marielle, De Henauw, Stefaan, Diouf, Adama, Abbeddou, Souheila, and Chakraborty, Pinaki
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CLUSTER randomized controlled trials ,BREASTFEEDING techniques ,DEUTERIUM oxide ,BREASTFEEDING ,BREAST milk ,HEALTH education - Abstract
Background: Exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) of infants during the first 6 months of their life is strongly recommended. Video‐based communication is an innovative method that could promote EBF. The present study is aimed at assessing the effectiveness of video‐based intervention in promoting breastfeeding practices from birth to 6 months postpartum. This was evaluated through maternal reports, as well as EBF of infants at 3 and 5 months of age, using the deuterium oxide dose‐to‐mother (DTM) technique. Methods: In a cluster randomized community trial, 16 communities were assigned to receive a video‐based behavior change communication (Video‐Health) or standard health care messages (Control). Pregnant women in their first trimester (12 ± 2 weeks) were enrolled and followed up, together with their infants, until 6 months postpartum. Data on breastfeeding practices were collected by questionnaire, monthly, in all the participants (n = 508). Human milk intake (HMI) and nonmilk oral intake (NMOI) were measured in a subsample of 60 mother–infant pairs at 3 and 5 months postpartum using DTM. Mixed models and logistic regression were used to examine the difference in continuous and discrete breastmilk practices between the intervention and the control arms, respectively. Results: The majority of mothers initiated breastfeeding early (92.1%), 82.4% reported colostrum feeding, and 17.5% provided prelacteal feeding. No significant differences were found between Video‐Health and Control arms (p > 0.05). The intervention significantly improved reported EBF rates at 4 and 5 months postpartum (p < 0.05). DTM results showed that the proportion of women practicing EBF was 50%–67% less than reported at 3 months for both arms and at 5 months in the intervention arm. The intervention did not significantly affect measured EBF at 3 and 5 months postpartum but did improve HMI at 3 months. Non significant differences in NMOI were observed at 3 months, but at 5 months, there was a significant difference between the study arms. Conclusions: Video‐based behavior change communication did not result in significant improvements in reported breastfeeding practices, except for a higher reported adherence to EBF beyond 3 months. Additionally, the intervention had no effect on EBF as measured by the DTM. Early introduction of non‐breastmilk foods and liquids persisted, despite self‐reported EBF extending up to 6 months postpartum. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT04414527 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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86. The health behaviors differences among male and female school-age adolescents in the Middle East and North Africa region countries: a meta-analysis of the Global School-based Student Health Survey data.
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Achak, Doha, Azizi, Asmaa, El-Ammari, Abdelghaffar, Marfak, Ibtissam Youlyouz, Saad, Elmadani, Nejjari, Chakib, Hilali, Abderraouf, Peltzer, Karl, and Marfak, Abdelghafour
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- 2024
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87. Analysis of Determinants of Stunting and Identifications of Stunting Risk Profiles Among Under 2-Year-Old Children in Ethiopia. A Latent Class Analysis.
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Fikrie, Anteneh, Adula, Berhanu, Beka, Jitu, Hailu, Dejene, Kitabo, Cheru Atsmegiorgis, and Spigt, Mark
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- 2024
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88. Effect of Dietary Energy Level during Late Gestation on Mineral Contents in Colostrum, Milk, and Plasma of Lactating Jennies.
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Hui, Fang, Tong, Manman, Li, Shuyi, Zhao, Yanli, Guo, Xiaoyu, Guo, Yongmei, Shi, Binlin, and Yan, Sumei
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BREAST milk ,BLOOD lactate ,COPPER ,WHEY proteins ,JUGULAR vein ,TRACE elements ,LACTATION in cattle ,LACTATION - Abstract
Simple Summary: Donkey milk is recognized as a functional food due to its high whey protein content. It is especially beneficial for newborn nutrition because of its nutritional similarities to human milk and its hypoallergenic properties. It can be used to prevent hypercholesterolemia and atherosclerosis. However, donkey lactation is less productive in terms of liters/d than dairy cow lactation. It has been suggested that the energy content of the diet in late pregnancy is the main factor influencing the composition of postpartum colostrum in dairy animals. However, research on the influence of dietary energy in late gestation on the mineral content of postpartum jenny milk is limited. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate the effect of dietary energy levels during late gestation on mineral contents in the colostrum milk of lactating jennies. The results showed that appropriately increasing dietary energy levels in late gestation increased the concentrations of Ca, P, K, Mg, Cu, Fe, Zn, and Mo in milk, but high dietary energy levels showed the opposite effect. The concentrations of these minerals in jenny milk decreased with the duration of lactation. This study investigated the effects of dietary energy levels during late gestation on mineral content in the plasma, colostrum, and milk of jennies postpartum. Twenty-four pregnant multiparous DeZhou jennies, aged 6.0 ± 0.1 years, with a body weight of 292 ± 33 kg, an average parity number of 2.7 ± 0.1, and similar expected dates of confinement (74 ± 4 days), were randomly allocated to three groups and fed three diets: high energy (12.54 MJ/kg, HE), medium energy (12.03 MJ/kg, ME), and low energy (11.39 MJ/kg, LE). Blood samples were collected from the jugular vein of each jenny at time points of 0 h, 24 h, 48 h, 5 d, 7 d, and 14 d after parturition. Additionally, milk samples were collected through manual milking, and an analysis of the mineral content was conducted. The results showed that compared with HE, both ME and LE significantly increased the levels of calcium (Ca), phosphorus (P), zinc (Zn), selenium (Se), molybdenum (Mo), and cobalt (Co) in the plasma and Ca, P, magnesium (Mg), copper (Cu), manganese (Mn), Zn, selenium (Se), molybdenum (Mo), and Co in the milk of jennies postpartum (p < 0.05); ME also increased the levels of potassium (K), iron (Fe), and Mn in plasma and K and Fe in milk (p < 0.05). The levels of Ca, K, Mg, P, Fe, Cu, Mn, Co, Se, Zn, and Mo in plasma and milk gradually decreased with increasing postpartum time. Their contents were the highest at 0 h postpartum, rapidly decreased after 24 h postpartum, and declined to the lowest on day 14 postpartum. The interaction between dietary energy level and postpartum time showed that although the concentrations of the minerals Ca, P, K, Mg, Fe, Cu, Mn, Zn, Co, Se, and Mo decreased in jennies' plasma and milk in the treatment groups with different energy levels as postpartum time increased, the pattern of change was also influenced by dietary energy level. The influence of dietary energy level in late gestation on the mineral content of milk and plasma during the postpartum colostrum phase was higher than that during the milk phase. In conclusion, this study demonstrated that, under the current experimental conditions, the mineral content of the colostrum, milk, and plasma of jennies after parturition was dependent on the dietary energy level during late gestation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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89. Inflammation and Colorectal Cancer: A Meta-Analysis of the Prognostic Significance of the Systemic Immune–Inflammation Index (SII) and the Systemic Inflammation Response Index (SIRI).
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Menyhart, Otilia, Fekete, János Tibor, and Győrffy, Balázs
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RANDOM effects model ,OVERALL survival ,COLORECTAL cancer ,PROGNOSIS ,CONFIDENCE intervals - Abstract
The overall prognosis for colorectal cancer (CRC) remains challenging as the survival time varies widely, even in patients with the same stage of disease. Recent studies suggest prognostic relevance of the novel markers of systemic inflammation, the systemic immune–inflammation index (SII), and the systemic inflammation response index (SIRI). We conducted a comprehensive meta-analysis to assess the prognostic significance of the SII and the SIRI in CRC. We searched the relevant literature for observational studies, and random effects models were employed to conduct a statistical analysis using the metaanalysisonline.com platform. Pooled effect sizes were reported with hazard ratios (HRs) and corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CI). Data from 29 studies published between 2016 and 2024, comprising 10,091 participants, were included in our meta-analysis on SII. CRC patients with high SII levels had worse disease outcomes, which were associated with poor OS (HR: 1.75; 95% CI: 1.4–2.19) and poor PFS/DFS/RFS (HR: 1.25; 95% CI: 1.18–1.33). This increased risk of worse OS was present irrespective of the treatment strategy, sample size (<220 and ≥220), and cutoff used to define high and low SII (<550 and ≥550) groups. Based on data from five studies comprising 2362 participants, we found a strong association between the high SIRI and worse OS (HR: 2.65; 95% CI: 1.6–4.38) and DFS/RFS (HR: 2.04; 95% CI: 1.42–2.93). According to our results, both the SII and SIRI hold great promise as prognostic markers in CRC. Further validations are needed for their age- and stage-specific utility in the clinical routine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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90. Effect of male partners' involvement and support on reproductive, maternal and child health and well‐being in East Africa: A scoping review.
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Fletcher, Richard, Forbes, Faye, Dadi, Abel Fekadu, Kassa, Getachew Mullu, Regan, Casey, Galle, Anna, Beyene, Addisu, Liackman, Rebecca, and Temmerman, Marleen
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WELL-being ,CHILDREN'S health ,MATERNAL health ,MALE reproductive health ,INTIMATE partner violence ,ABUSED women ,MALE athletes - Abstract
Background and Aims: East African countries have high rates of maternal and child mortality and morbidity. Studies have shown that the involvement of male partners in reproductive health can benefit maternal and child health (MCH). This scoping review aims to provide an overview of the evidence across East Africa that describes male partner involvement and its effect on maternal, reproductive, and child well‐being. Methods: Ten databases were searched to identify quantitative data on male's involvement in East Africa. Studies reporting qualitative data, "intention to use" data or only reporting on male partner's education or economic status were excluded. Studies were organized into five a priori categories: antenatal care (ANC), human immunodeficiency virus, breastfeeding, family planning, and intimate partner violence with further categories developed based on studies included. Results: A total of 2787 records were identified; 644 full texts were reviewed, and 96 studies were included in this review. Data were reported on 118,967 mothers/pregnant women and 15,361 male partners. Most of the studies (n = 83) were reported from four countries Ethiopia (n = 49), Kenya (n = 14), Tanzania (n = 12) and Uganda (n = 10). The evidence indicates that male partner involvement and support is associated with improved reproductive, MCH across a wide range of outcomes. However, the studies were heterogeneous, using diverse exposure and outcome measures. Also, male partners' lack of practical and emotional support, and engagement in violent behaviors towards partners, were associated with profound negative impacts on MCH and well‐being. Conclusions: The body of evidence, although heterogeneous, provides compelling support for male involvement in reproductive health programs designed to support MCH. To advance research in this field, an agreement is needed on a measure of male partner "involvement." To optimize benefits of male partners' involvement, developing core outcome sets and regional coordination are recommended. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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91. Exploring Breastfeeding Practices and Influencing Factors Among the KOL Tribe in Uttar Pradesh: A Mixed-Methods Study.
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Yadav, Surbhi, Ahmad, Shamshad, Lohani, Pallavi, Gahlot, Anju, and Kumar, Mahendra
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ATTITUDES toward breastfeeding ,BREASTFEEDING ,HEALTH services accessibility ,QUALITATIVE research ,HEALTH attitudes ,T-test (Statistics) ,EAST Asians ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,INTERVIEWING ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,CULTURE ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,QUANTITATIVE research ,CHI-squared test ,SOUND recordings ,THEMATIC analysis ,RESEARCH methodology ,ANALYSIS of variance ,DATA analysis software ,QUALITY assurance - Abstract
Introduction: Breastfeeding is crucial for infant health, yet challenges persist in promoting early initiation and exclusive breastfeeding, particularly among marginalized communities like the KOL tribe in Uttar Pradesh. This study aimed to understand breastfeeding practices among the KOL tribe and identify factors influencing these practices. Methods: A mixed-methods approach was employed, involving quantitative data collection through pre-designed questionnaires and qualitative in-depth interviews with KOL tribe mothers. Sampling included random selection, and data analysis was conducted using SPSS for quantitative data and QDA minor lite software for qualitative data. Results: Socioeconomic challenges were prevalent among the KOL tribe, with most women being illiterate and engaged in manual labour. Breastfeeding practices varied, including delayed initiation, reliance on cow/goat milk, and misconceptions about colostrum Health care utilization was limited, with home deliveries common due to family incompliance. Despite challenges, community support for breastfeeding was reported, and mothers felt comfortable breastfeeding in public. Conclusion: The study underscores the influence of socio-economic factors, cultural beliefs, and limited awareness on breastfeeding practices among the KOL tribe. Targeted interventions focusing on education, community engagement, and improving healthcare access are crucial for promoting optimal breastfeeding practices and improving infant health outcomes in marginalized communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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92. Analysis of Associated Factors with the Performance of Nutrition Workers in Achieving Exclusive Breastfeeding Coverage in Hulu Sungai Utara District.
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Chairunnisa, Sanyoto, Didik Dwi, Panghiyangani, Roselina, Istiqomah, Ermina, and Arifin, Syamsul
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BREASTFEEDING ,MALNUTRITION ,MEDICAL care standards ,CHI-squared test ,INDEPENDENT variables - Abstract
Background: In 2022, exclusive breastfeeding coverage in Indonesia will only reach 67.96%, indicating the need for more intensive support to increase this coverage. Competent human resources, especially in conducting nutritional surveillance, as well as the demands and needs of quality health services in dealing with malnutrition, can describe the current health condition. Objective: This study aims to analyze the relationship between the knowledge of nutrition implementers (TPG) about the exclusive breastfeeding program, the availability of TPG in implementing the exclusive breastfeeding program, and the facilities in implementing the exclusive breastfeeding program with TPG's performance in achieving exclusive breastfeeding coverage in North Hulu Sungai Regency. Methods: This study uses an observational analytical method with a cross-sectional approach. The sample in this study is 46 TPG. Data analysis was carried out using the Chi-Square test and multiple logistic regression. Results: The chi-square test showed that there was a relationship between TPG knowledge (p=0.007), TPG availability (p=0.013), and facilities (p=0.020) in the exclusive breastfeeding program and TPG's performance in achieving exclusive breastfeeding coverage. The results of the multiple logistic regression test concluded that all independent variables were simultaneously related to TPG's performance in achieving exclusive breastfeeding coverage in the North Hulu Sungai Regency. Conclusion: there is a relationship between TPG knowledge, TPG availability, and facilities in exclusive breastfeeding programs and TPG's performance in achieving exclusive breastfeeding coverage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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93. Breastfeeding promotion and priority setting in health.
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Horton, S, Sanghvi, T, Phillips, M, Fiedler, J, Perez-Escamilla, R, Lutter, C, Rivera, A, and Segall-Correa, A M
- Abstract
An increase in exclusive breastfeeding prevalence can substantially reduce mortality and morbidity among infants. In this paper, estimates of the costs and impacts of three breastfeeding promotion programmes, implemented through maternity services in Brazil, Honduras and Mexico, are used to develop cost-effectiveness measures and these are compared with other health interventions. The results show that breastfeeding promotion can be one of the most cost-effective health interventions for preventing cases of diarrhoea, preventing deaths from diarrhoea, and gaining disability-adjusted life years (DALYs). The benefits are substantial over a broad range of programme types. Programmes starting with the removal of formula and medications during delivery are likely to derive a high level of impact per unit of net incremental cost. Cost-effectiveness is lower (but still attractive relative to other interventions) if hospitals already have rooming-in and no bottle-feeds; and the cost-effectiveness improves as programmes become well-established. At an annual cost of about 30 to 40 US cents per birth, programmes starting with formula feeding in nurseries and maternity wards can reduce diarrhoea cases for approximately $0.65 to $1.10 per case prevented, diarrhoea deaths for $100 to $200 per death averted, and reduce the burden of disease for approximately $2 to $4 per DALY. Maternity services that have already eliminated formula can, by investing from $2 to $3 per birth, prevent diarrhoea cases and deaths for $3.50 to $6.75 per case, and $550 to $800 per death respectively, with DALYs gained at $12 to $19 each. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
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94. Exclusive breast-feeding duration is associated with attitudinal, socioeconomic and biocultural determinants in three Latin American countries.
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Pérez-Escamilla, R, Lutter, C, Segall, A M, Rivera, A, Treviño-Siller, S, and Sanghvi, T
- Abstract
International health organizations have recommended exclusive breast-feeding (EBF) (i.e., breast milk as the only source of food) as the optimal infant feeding method during the first 4-6 mo of life. Therefore, it is important to document the determinants of EBF in different populations. Low-income urban women from Brazil (n = 446, 2 maternity wards), Honduras (n = 1582, 3 maternity wards) and Mexico (n = 765, 3 maternity wards) were interviewed at birth and in their homes at 1 mo and 2-4 mo after delivery. Multivariate survival analyses (Cox model) indicated that planned duration of EBF (all 3 countries), having a female infant, and not being employed (Brazil and Honduras), lower socioeconomic status (Honduras and Mexico) and higher birth weight (control hospital in Brazil and Honduras) were positively associated (P < or = 0.10) with EBF. Women who delivered in the maternity wards that had more developed breast-feeding promotion programs were more successful with EBF. The association between maternal education and EBF was modified by the maternity ward in Mexico and Honduras. Being > or = 18 y and having a partner living (Brazil) or not (Mexico) living at home were positively associated with EBF. These findings can contribute toward the design of EBF promotion efforts in Latin America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
95. Handwashing before food preparation and child feeding: a missed opportunity for hygiene promotion.
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Nizame FA, Unicomb L, Sanghvi T, Roy S, Nuruzzaman M, Ghosh PK, Winch PJ, and Luby SP
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- Bangladesh, Caregivers, Enterobacteriaceae Infections microbiology, Female, Focus Groups, Health Behavior, Health Education, Health Surveys, Humans, Infant, Interviews as Topic, Male, Rural Population, Videotape Recording, Diarrhea prevention & control, Enterobacteriaceae Infections prevention & control, Food Handling standards, Hand Disinfection methods, Hand Disinfection standards, Hygiene
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Enteric diseases are often caused by poor hygiene and can contribute to stunting. From 50 randomly selected villages in Bangladesh, we collected quantitative and qualitative data on handwashing linked to child feeding to integrate handwashing promotion into a young child complementary feeding program. Most participants stated that the community knew the importance of handwashing with soap before food preparation and feeding a child, but had not developed the habit. We observed no handwashing with soap at these key times; sometimes hands were rinsed with water only. Most participants cited the unavailability of soap and water near the cooking place as a barrier to handwashing before food preparation. Most caregivers ranked nurturing messages as the best motivator to encourage handwashing with soap. An integrated intervention should include having soap and water available near the food preparation area and should use nurturing themes to encourage habitual handwashing with soap.
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- 2013
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96. Changing maternal, infant and young child nutrition practices through social and behaviour change interventions implemented at scale: Lessons learned from Alive & Thrive.
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Flax VL, Bose S, Escobar-DeMarco J, and Frongillo EA
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Alive & Thrive (A&T) is an initiative designed to advance the implementation of maternal, infant and young child nutrition (MIYCN) social and behaviour change (SBC) at a large scale. The aims of this research were to: (1) describe A&T's SBC implementation processes and their impact based on a review of programme documents and peer-reviewed publications and (2) gather lessons learned from key informant interviews (N = 23) with A&T staff and stakeholders in Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, India, Nigeria and Vietnam. A&T's SBC approach used interpersonal communication, community mobilization and mass media to address knowledge gaps, strengthen self-efficacy and shift social norms. The initiative used data for design and evaluation and facilitated scale and sustainability through close collaboration with governments and other stakeholders. A&T's approach increased exclusive breastfeeding, minimum meal frequency of children and use of iron and folic acid tablets by pregnant women, but had mixed impacts on early initiation of breastfeeding and maternal and child dietary diversity. Multiple SBC channels and frequent contacts strengthened the impact of SBC on MIYCN practices. Lessons learned included: using existing large-scale platforms for interpersonal communication, improving counselling skills of health workers, delivering timely tailored messages, engaging key influencers to take specific actions, using research to address underlying behavioural concerns and maximize mass media reach and frequency, using simple memorable messages and employing additional channels to reach low media coverage areas. A&T developed and implemented at-scale MIYCN SBC in multiple countries, providing lessons learned about intervention strategies, engagement of influencers and mass media campaign development, which governments and other implementers can adapt and replicate., (© 2023 The Authors. Maternal & Child Nutrition published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2023
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97. A Follow-up Study on the Sustained Impact of Alive & Thrive Interventions on Infant and Young Child Feeding Practices
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FHI 360
- Published
- 2019
98. Learning from the design and implementation of large-scale programs to improve infant and young child feeding.
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Baker J, Sanghvi T, Hajeebhoy N, and Abrha TH
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- Bangladesh, Breast Feeding, Child, Preschool, Developing Countries, Ethiopia, Female, Health Behavior, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Nutritional Status, Vietnam, Child Health Services methods, Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Health Promotion methods, Program Evaluation methods
- Abstract
Background: Improving and sustaining infant and young child feeding (IYCF) practices requires multiple interventions reaching diverse target groups over a sustained period of time. These interventions, together with improved maternal nutrition, are the cornerstones for realizing a lifetime of benefitsfrom investing in nutrition during the 1000 day period., Objective: Summarize major lessons from Alive & Thrive's work to improve IYCF in three diverse settings--Bangladesh, Ethiopia, and Vietnam., Methods: Draw lessons from reports, studies, surveys, routine monitoring, and discussions on the drivers of successful design and implementation of lYCF strategies., Results: Teaming up with carefully selected implementing partners with strong commitment is a critical first step. As programs move to implementation at scale, strategic systems strengthening is needed to avoid operational bottlenecks. Performance of adequate IYCF counseling takes more than training; it requires rational task allocation, substantial follow up, and recognition of frontline workers. Investing in community demand for IYCF services should be prioritized, specifically through social mobilization and relevant media for multiple audiences. Design of behavior change communication and its implementation must be flexible and responsive to shifts in society's use of media and other social changes. Private sector creative agencies and media companies are well equipped to market IYCF. Scaling up core IYCF interventions and maintaining quality are facilitated by national-level coordinating and information exchange mechanisms using evidence on quality and coverage., Conclusions: It is possible to deliver quality IYCF interventions at scale, while creating new knowledge, tools, and approaches that can be adapted by others
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- 2013
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99. Using an evidence-based approach to design large-scale programs to improve infant and young child feeding.
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Baker J, Sanghvi T, Hajeebhoy N, Martin L, and Lapping K
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- Bangladesh, Breast Feeding, Child, Preschool, Developing Countries, Ethiopia, Health Behavior, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Nutritional Status, United Nations, Vietnam, World Health Organization, Child Health Services methods, Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Evidence-Based Medicine methods, Health Promotion methods
- Abstract
Background: Global interest in scaling up nutrition outcomes has focused attention on the need for more effective programs to improve infant and young child feeding (IYCF). However there are few examples in the literature of comprehensive programs that have been systematically designed., Objective: To describe an evidence-based approach for designing large-scale yet tailored IYCF programs in varied country settings., Methods: Behavior change principles, epidemiological data, situational analysis, stakeholder consultations, formative research, and feasibility studies informed the design of IYCF programs delivered at scale in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, and Vietnam., Results: Impact, scale, and sustainability objectives guided the choice of partners, service delivery platforms, and advocacy, systems strengthening, and communication strategies for reaching mothers and decision makers. All programs focused on the critical first 2 years of life, followed global World Health Organization and UNICEF guidelines for IYCF, and applied a common theory of change. Formative research, stakeholder consultations, trials of improved practices, and assessments of media habits were most useful for making program decisions. Opinion leader research, monitoring of the policy environment, and stakeholder analysis were key elements in the design of advocacy strategies. All programs found that setting measurable and explicit targets, strengthening systems to provide support for mothers, multichannel communication, and advocacy for opinion leaders were vital components in the design., Conclusions: A systematic, evidence-based collaborative approach can facilitate the design of comprehensive IYCF programs. Programs should also embed design flexibility to enable changes as new challenges and opportunities arise.
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- 2013
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100. Change strategies to protect, promote, and support infant and young child feeding.
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Hajeebhoy N, Rigsby A, Mccoll A, Sanghvi T, Abrha TH, Godana A, Roy S, Phan LT, Vu HT, Sather M, and Uddin B
- Subjects
- Bangladesh, Breast Feeding, Child Health Services legislation & jurisprudence, Child, Preschool, Developing Countries, Ethiopia, Evidence-Based Medicine legislation & jurisprudence, Food Supply, Health Promotion legislation & jurisprudence, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Nutritional Status, Poverty, Vietnam, Child Health Services methods, Evidence-Based Medicine methods, Health Promotion methods, Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena legislation & jurisprudence, Nutrition Policy legislation & jurisprudence
- Abstract
Background: Despite the existence of a strong evidence base for investing in infant and young child feeding (IYCF), sufficiently supported IYCF policies and programs are rare., Objective: To develop evidence-based advocacy strategies in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, and Vietnam to enable policy change and to increase investments in and ensure scale-up and sustainability of IYCF programs., Methods: Situational analysis, formative and opinion leader research, and stakeholder consultations were used to develop three contextualized advocacy strategies., Results: Data were used to determine how IYCF was perceived and prioritized, identify opinion leaders and partners, identify barriers to and opportunities for strengthening commitment, and select messages, materials, and communication channels. Opinion leader research showed that malnutrition was a concern but not a priority for policy action. Where food security was an issue, poverty reduction strategies rather than IYCF programs were viewed as the solution. Few opinion leaders were aware of the importance of the first 1000 days of life. In addition to policy gaps, awareness and implementation of existing policies were limited. This was often complicated by intragovernment conflicts and perspectives. Advocacy messages needed to be evidence based and delivered by credible champions. Engaging medical associations and the media presented an opportunity rarely leveraged in IYCF advocacy. CONCLUSIONS. Although sociopolitical contexts may vary, awareness of the importance of IYCF is an overarching advocacy challenge. Consequently, investments in IYCF programs and policies lag. Evidence-based advocacy design has a potential for impact on national policies, investments, and commitment to implementation and should be used more widely to inform program design.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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