Integrating economic and educational intervention activities in the ENAM project leads to improved child nutritional status in rural Ghana

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Details

Author(s):
Grace S Marquis; Kimberly B Harding; Esi K Colecraft; Anna Lartey; Owuraku Sakyi-Dawson; B K Ahunu; Manju B Reddy; Helen H Jensen; Lorna M Butler; Elisabeth Lonergan

Type of Document:
Scholarly Article

 

Publisher/Journal:
Not Available

Date of Publication:
2007

Place of Publication:
Not Available

Description

Abstract: Animal source foods (ASF) are excellent sources of micronutrients that are essential for growth and development of young children. In sub-Saharan Africa, children’s typical diets are based on starchy staples and little ASF, contributing to high rates of child malnutrition. The Enhancing Child Nutrition through Animal Source Food Management (ENAM) project identified constraints to the availability, accessibility, and utilization of ASF in the diets of young children (2-5 y) in Ghana. Based on the identified constraints, an intervention involving micro-credit and nutrition and entrepreneurial education with 180 caregivers of young children was implemented in six communities in three agro-ecological zones; 287 households in matched communities were chosen as controls. Child height and weight were measured at baseline and every 4 mo. Children from intervention households showed a greater increase in height-for-age Z-score over the course of the 16-month study than children from control households (0.3

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