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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02740842

A Follow-up Study on the Sustained Impact of Alive & Thrive Interventions on Infant and Young Child Feeding Practices

A Follow-up Study on the Sustained Impact of Alive & Thrive Behavior Change Communication Interventions on Infant and Young Child Feeding Practices in Bangladesh

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
2,400 (actual)
Sponsor
International Food Policy Research Institute · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 45 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Alive \& Thrive (A\&T) is a multi-year initiative to improve infant and young child feeding (IYCF) practices. During Phase 1 (A\&T-1, 2009-2014), funded by the Bill \& Melinda Gates Foundation, A\&T aimed to reduce undernutrition and death caused by suboptimal IYCF practices in three countries - Bangladesh, Ethiopia, and Viet Nam. In 2014, IFPRI in collaboration with DATA conducted the endline survey in Bangladesh. The overall findings of the evaluation indicate that A\&T's work in Bangladesh is a remarkable success story of scaling up what has been challenging to date in the field of nutrition: complex, high intensity and at-scale behavior change communications interventions. In 2016, a follow up study will be conducted to determine the sustained impacts on IYCF practices, expansion of operations and promoted practices into new areas, and diffusion of IYCF information, two years after the termination of external project support.

Detailed description

Alive \& Thrive (A\&T) is a multi-year initiative to improve infant and young child feeding (IYCF) practices. During Phase 1 (A\&T-1, 2009-2014), funded by the Bill \& Melinda Gates Foundation, A\&T aimed to reduce undernutrition and death caused by suboptimal IYCF practices in three countries - Bangladesh, Ethiopia, and Viet Nam. A\&T-1 strategies in Bangladesh were designed to support improvements in IYCF in three key ways: 1) improving policy and regulatory environments (advocacy); 2) shaping IYCF demand and practice (community-based interventions); and 3) increasing supply, demand, and use of high quality complementary foods (private sector engagement). In addition, a communications component was integrated into each of these focus areas to support their activities. In 2014, IFPRI in collaboration with DATA conducted the endline survey. The overall findings of the evaluation indicate that A\&T's work in Bangladesh is a remarkable success story of scaling up what has been challenging to date in the field of nutrition: complex, high intensity and at-scale behavior change communications interventions. This is demonstrated by a series of findings on reach of the interpersonal counseling interventions and the mass media, as well as attributable improvements in several critical indicators. During the intervention period, A\&T facilitated the training of over 75,000 frontline workers and health providers across the country. The program model reached large scale with an estimated 1.7 million mothers of children under 2 years in 50 sub-districts. The mass media intervention operated at a national level and through national television channels. Compared to the 2010 baseline survey, improvements were seen in several key IYCF practices that are attributable to A\&T intensive package of interventions. Specifically, large significant impacts were seen on two key breastfeeding indicators: EBF (DID impact estimates: 36.9 percentage point-pp) and early initiation of BF (DID 19.4 pp). Similarly, large significant impact were seen in minimum dietary diversity (DID 16.3 pp), minimum meal frequency (DID 14.7 pp), minimum acceptable diet (DID 22.0 pp), and consumption of iron rich food (DID 24.6 pp). In 2016, a follow up study will be conducted to determine the sustained impacts on IYCF practices, expansion of operations and promoted practices into new areas, and diffusion of IYCF information, two years after the termination of external project support. Because achievements related to service delivery and outcomes are intended to be sustained in the intervention areas and even expanded to other areas where BRAC's Essential Health Care program operates, including the comparison areas, this study aims to examine elements in both the original intervention and comparison areas. This study focuses on the follow-up survey of the BRAC community-based model. The study research questions include: Sustained impacts 1. To what extent are IYCF knowledge and practices sustained in the intervention areas? 2. To what extent is exposure to IYCF and nutrition behavior change communications sustained in the intervention areas? Expanded operations and reach 1) To what extent has exposure to IYCF and nutrition behavior change communications been expanded (i.e. in comparison areas)? Diffusion of information 1\) To what extent is IYCF information diffused through social networks or by other sources (i.e. other than BRAC frontline workers)?

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALInterpersonal behavioral change communicationThis arm includes home visits to mothers with infants and young children. Frontline health workers will counsel and support mothers in relation to breastfeeding and complementary feeding practices
BEHAVIORALMass mediaA nationwide mass media campaign of TV and radio spots on infant and young child feeding practices will be aired in 2011, 2012 and 2013. All intervention arms will be exposed to this campaign.

Timeline

Start date
2016-04-01
Primary completion
2016-06-01
Completion
2016-11-01
First posted
2016-04-15
Last updated
2019-10-16

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02740842. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.