Feasibility and impact of school-based nutrition education interventions on the diets of adolescent girls in Ethiopia: a non-masked, cluster-randomised, controlled trial

Background Adolescence is a critical period of physical and psychological development, especially for girls, because poor nutrition can affect their wellbeing as well as that of their children. We aimed to assess the feasibility and impact of a package of nutrition education interventions delivered...

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Main Authors: Kim, Sunny S., Sununtnasuk, Celeste, Berhane, Hanna Y., Walissa, Tamirat Tafesse, Oumer, Abdulaziz Ali, Asrat, Yonas Taffesse, Sanghvi, Tina, Frongillo, Edward A., Menon, Purnima
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Elsevier 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139987
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author Kim, Sunny S.
Sununtnasuk, Celeste
Berhane, Hanna Y.
Walissa, Tamirat Tafesse
Oumer, Abdulaziz Ali
Asrat, Yonas Taffesse
Sanghvi, Tina
Frongillo, Edward A.
Menon, Purnima
author_browse Asrat, Yonas Taffesse
Berhane, Hanna Y.
Frongillo, Edward A.
Kim, Sunny S.
Menon, Purnima
Oumer, Abdulaziz Ali
Sanghvi, Tina
Sununtnasuk, Celeste
Walissa, Tamirat Tafesse
author_facet Kim, Sunny S.
Sununtnasuk, Celeste
Berhane, Hanna Y.
Walissa, Tamirat Tafesse
Oumer, Abdulaziz Ali
Asrat, Yonas Taffesse
Sanghvi, Tina
Frongillo, Edward A.
Menon, Purnima
author_sort Kim, Sunny S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Background Adolescence is a critical period of physical and psychological development, especially for girls, because poor nutrition can affect their wellbeing as well as that of their children. We aimed to assess the feasibility and impact of a package of nutrition education interventions delivered through public primary schools on the diets of adolescent girls in Ethiopia. Methods In this non-masked, cluster-randomised, controlled trial, primary schools (clusters) in the Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region and Somali region of Ethiopia were randomly allocated to the intervention group (nutrition information provided during flag ceremonies, classroom lessons, school club meetings, peer group mentoring, BMI measurement and counselling, and parent–teacher meetings) or the control group (standard academic curriculum on health and nutrition) by use of computer-generated pseudo-random numbers. Duration of the school-based interventions was 4 months, and the key messages were related to dietary diversity (eating a variety of foods), energy adequacy (eating breakfast and healthy snacks), and healthy food choices (avoiding junk foods). Adolescent girls were eligible for participation if aged 10–14 years and enrolled in grades 4–8 in a study school. Data were collected with two independent cross-sectional surveys: baseline before the start of implementation and endline 1·5 years later. The primary outcome of impact was dietary diversity score, defined as the number of food groups (out of ten) consumed over the previous 24 h using a list-based method, and minimum dietary diversity, defined as the proportion of girls who consumed foods from at least five of the ten food groups, in the intention-to-treat population. We also assessed intervention exposure as a measure of feasibility. We estimated intervention effects using linear regression models for mean differences at endline, with SEs clustered at the school level, and controlled for adolescent age, region, household food security, and wealth. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.Gov, NCT04121559, and is complete. Findings 27 primary schools were randomly allocated to the intervention group and 27 to the control group. Between March 22 and April 29, 2021, 536 adolescent girls participated in the endline survey (270 in the intervention group and 266 in the control group), with median age of 13·3 years (IQR 12·1–14·0). At endline, the dietary diversity score was 5·37 (SD 1·66) food groups in the intervention group and 3·98 (1·43) food groups in the control group (adjusted mean difference 1·33, 95% CI 0·90–1·75, p<0·0001). Increased minimum dietary diversity was also associated with the intervention (182 [67%] of 270 in the intervention group vs 76 [29%] of 266 in the control group; adjusted odds ratio 5·37 [95% CI 3·04–9·50], p<0·0001). 256 (95%) of 270 adolescent girls in the intervention group were exposed to at least one of the five in-school intervention components. Interpretation Integrating nutrition interventions into primary schools in Ethiopia was feasible and increased dietary diversity incrementally among adolescent girls, but could be limited in changing other food choice behaviours, such as junk food consumption, based on nutrition education alone.
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spelling CGSpace1399872025-12-09T19:56:57Z Feasibility and impact of school-based nutrition education interventions on the diets of adolescent girls in Ethiopia: a non-masked, cluster-randomised, controlled trial Kim, Sunny S. Sununtnasuk, Celeste Berhane, Hanna Y. Walissa, Tamirat Tafesse Oumer, Abdulaziz Ali Asrat, Yonas Taffesse Sanghvi, Tina Frongillo, Edward A. Menon, Purnima girls education research methods research nutrition education adolescence (human) nutrition diet Background Adolescence is a critical period of physical and psychological development, especially for girls, because poor nutrition can affect their wellbeing as well as that of their children. We aimed to assess the feasibility and impact of a package of nutrition education interventions delivered through public primary schools on the diets of adolescent girls in Ethiopia. Methods In this non-masked, cluster-randomised, controlled trial, primary schools (clusters) in the Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region and Somali region of Ethiopia were randomly allocated to the intervention group (nutrition information provided during flag ceremonies, classroom lessons, school club meetings, peer group mentoring, BMI measurement and counselling, and parent–teacher meetings) or the control group (standard academic curriculum on health and nutrition) by use of computer-generated pseudo-random numbers. Duration of the school-based interventions was 4 months, and the key messages were related to dietary diversity (eating a variety of foods), energy adequacy (eating breakfast and healthy snacks), and healthy food choices (avoiding junk foods). Adolescent girls were eligible for participation if aged 10–14 years and enrolled in grades 4–8 in a study school. Data were collected with two independent cross-sectional surveys: baseline before the start of implementation and endline 1·5 years later. The primary outcome of impact was dietary diversity score, defined as the number of food groups (out of ten) consumed over the previous 24 h using a list-based method, and minimum dietary diversity, defined as the proportion of girls who consumed foods from at least five of the ten food groups, in the intention-to-treat population. We also assessed intervention exposure as a measure of feasibility. We estimated intervention effects using linear regression models for mean differences at endline, with SEs clustered at the school level, and controlled for adolescent age, region, household food security, and wealth. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.Gov, NCT04121559, and is complete. Findings 27 primary schools were randomly allocated to the intervention group and 27 to the control group. Between March 22 and April 29, 2021, 536 adolescent girls participated in the endline survey (270 in the intervention group and 266 in the control group), with median age of 13·3 years (IQR 12·1–14·0). At endline, the dietary diversity score was 5·37 (SD 1·66) food groups in the intervention group and 3·98 (1·43) food groups in the control group (adjusted mean difference 1·33, 95% CI 0·90–1·75, p<0·0001). Increased minimum dietary diversity was also associated with the intervention (182 [67%] of 270 in the intervention group vs 76 [29%] of 266 in the control group; adjusted odds ratio 5·37 [95% CI 3·04–9·50], p<0·0001). 256 (95%) of 270 adolescent girls in the intervention group were exposed to at least one of the five in-school intervention components. Interpretation Integrating nutrition interventions into primary schools in Ethiopia was feasible and increased dietary diversity incrementally among adolescent girls, but could be limited in changing other food choice behaviours, such as junk food consumption, based on nutrition education alone. 2023-10 2024-03-14T12:08:48Z 2024-03-14T12:08:48Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139987 en https://doi.org/10.1093/cdn/nzac060.065 Open Access Elsevier Kim, Sunny S.; Sununtnasuk, Celeste; Berhane, Hanna Y; Walissa, Tamirat Tafesse; Oumer, Abdulaziz Ali; Menon, Purnima; et al. Feasibility and impact of school-based nutrition education interventions on the diets of adolescent girls in Ethiopia: a non-masked, cluster-randomised, controlled trial. Lancet Child and Adolescent Health 7: 686–96. https://doi.org/10.1016/S2352-4642(23)00168-2
spellingShingle girls education
research methods
research
nutrition education
adolescence (human)
nutrition
diet
Kim, Sunny S.
Sununtnasuk, Celeste
Berhane, Hanna Y.
Walissa, Tamirat Tafesse
Oumer, Abdulaziz Ali
Asrat, Yonas Taffesse
Sanghvi, Tina
Frongillo, Edward A.
Menon, Purnima
Feasibility and impact of school-based nutrition education interventions on the diets of adolescent girls in Ethiopia: a non-masked, cluster-randomised, controlled trial
title Feasibility and impact of school-based nutrition education interventions on the diets of adolescent girls in Ethiopia: a non-masked, cluster-randomised, controlled trial
title_full Feasibility and impact of school-based nutrition education interventions on the diets of adolescent girls in Ethiopia: a non-masked, cluster-randomised, controlled trial
title_fullStr Feasibility and impact of school-based nutrition education interventions on the diets of adolescent girls in Ethiopia: a non-masked, cluster-randomised, controlled trial
title_full_unstemmed Feasibility and impact of school-based nutrition education interventions on the diets of adolescent girls in Ethiopia: a non-masked, cluster-randomised, controlled trial
title_short Feasibility and impact of school-based nutrition education interventions on the diets of adolescent girls in Ethiopia: a non-masked, cluster-randomised, controlled trial
title_sort feasibility and impact of school based nutrition education interventions on the diets of adolescent girls in ethiopia a non masked cluster randomised controlled trial
topic girls education
research methods
research
nutrition education
adolescence (human)
nutrition
diet
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139987
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