Opportunities for improving maternal nutrition and birth outcomes: synthesis of country experiences.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to understand interventions addressing maternal undernutrition, including the role of food fortification (such as iodized salt) in improving maternal, neonatal, and child health outcomes.
Results Summary
The study found that food fortification, including iodized salt, is a potential intervention to address maternal undernutrition, alongside other measures like iron-folate supplementation and cash transfer programs. It emphasized the need for system development and capacity building for effective implementation.
Population
Women in poor countries, specifically case studies from Ethiopia, India, and Nigeria.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
iron-folate supplementation | decrease | anemia | women in poor countries | - | can be reduced | #1 |
food supplementation or cash transfers | decrease | intra-uterine growth retardation (IUGR) | women in poor countries | - | may be required for impact | #2 |
measures to combat early pregnancy | decrease | intra-uterine growth retardation (IUGR) | women in poor countries | - | may be required for impact | #3 |
child nutrition programs | decrease | the intergenerational cycle of women's undernutrition | women in poor countries | - | may also be helped by | #4 |
BACKGROUND: Undernutrition in women in poor countries remains prevalent and affects maternal, neonatal and child health (MNCH) outcomes. Improving MNCH outcomes requires better policies and programs that enhance women's nutrition. OBJECTIVE: The studies aimed to better understand awareness, perceptions, barriers to intervention, and policy and program priorities and approaches, through different platforms, addressing three related priority problems: anemia, intra-uterine growth retardation (IUGR), and maternal thinness and stunting (including incomplete growth with early pregnancy). METHODS: Results of a global literature review on program effectiveness, and from case studies in Ethiopia, India, and Nigeria, were synthesized. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Anemia can be reduced by iron-folate supplementation, but all aspects for successful implementation, from priority to resources to local capacity, require strengthening. For IUGR, additional interventions, offood supplementation or cash transfers, may be required for impact, plus measures to combat early pregnancy. Breaking the intergenerational cycle of women's undernutrition may also be helped by child nutrition programs. Potential interventions exist and need to be built on: iron-folate and multiple micronutrient supplementation, food fortification (including iodized salt),food supplementation and/or cash transfer programs, combatting early pregnancy, infant and young child nutrition. Potential platforms are: the health system especially antenatal care, community-based nutrition programs (presently usually child-oriented but can be extended to women), child health days, safety net programs, especially cash transfer and conditional cash transfer programs. Making these more effective requires system development and organization, capacity and training, technical guidelines and operational research, and advocacy (who takes the lead?), information, monitoring and evaluation.