Training of health workers and traditional leaders on maternal and child nutrition and optimal practices for inclusion of animal-source foods in healthy diets in Uganda

An exploratory study conducted by the CGIAR’s Sustainable Animal Productivity for Livelihoods, Nutrition and Gender inclusion (SAPLING) work package 2 in March–April 2023 in Masaka, Mukono and Wakiso districts in Uganda showed nutrition knowledge gaps for both men and women livestock farmers. Result...

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Autores principales: Ouma, Emily A., Ahumuza, Ronnie, Ahmed, Hardi, Omosa, Esther, Achandi, Esther, Ngalombi, Sarah, Ahumuza, Laura, Teufel, Nils, Molina, Teresa
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Livestock Research Institute 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159429
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author Ouma, Emily A.
Ahumuza, Ronnie
Ahmed, Hardi
Omosa, Esther
Achandi, Esther
Ngalombi, Sarah
Ahumuza, Laura
Teufel, Nils
Molina, Teresa
author_browse Achandi, Esther
Ahmed, Hardi
Ahumuza, Laura
Ahumuza, Ronnie
Molina, Teresa
Ngalombi, Sarah
Omosa, Esther
Ouma, Emily A.
Teufel, Nils
author_facet Ouma, Emily A.
Ahumuza, Ronnie
Ahmed, Hardi
Omosa, Esther
Achandi, Esther
Ngalombi, Sarah
Ahumuza, Laura
Teufel, Nils
Molina, Teresa
author_sort Ouma, Emily A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description An exploratory study conducted by the CGIAR’s Sustainable Animal Productivity for Livelihoods, Nutrition and Gender inclusion (SAPLING) work package 2 in March–April 2023 in Masaka, Mukono and Wakiso districts in Uganda showed nutrition knowledge gaps for both men and women livestock farmers. Results also revealed socio-cultural norms based on beliefs that hinder consumption of some animal-source foods (ASFs) for some members of the society, particularly children and women. For instance, some cultures hinder consumption of ASFs such as eggs, pork and certain types of fish for pregnant women. SAPLING in collaboration with stakeholders co-designed a social behaviour change communication (SBCC) intervention that goes beyond the provision of nutrition education to improve nutrition knowledge but also focuses on addressing norms to demystify consumption of ASFs by children and women of childbearing age. The intervention was implemented by health workers, specifically the village health teams (VHTs) through a cluster-randomized controlled trial design with three study arms in Mukono and Masaka districts as follows: 1. T0 - One third of the clusters (villages) were randomly assigned to receive nutrition information provided only to women using adapted Ministry of Health's Maternal Infant and Young Children Adolescent Nutrition (MIYCAN) counselling cards. 2. T0+T1: - One third of the clusters were randomly assigned to receive nutrition information provided to both men and women using MIYCAN counselling cards. 3. T0+T1+T2: The remaining one third of the clusters were randomly assigned to receive nutrition information provided to both men and women using MIYCAN cards and a gender transformative intervention targeting men and women to address social norms associated with consumption of livestock derived foods particularly for women and children. Health workers and traditional leaders selected to implement the SBCC interventions were trained to deliver the interventions for the specific study arms. They were trained in maternal and child nutrition and optimal practices for inclusion of animal-source foods in healthy diets, as well as social norms messaging to demystify consumption of ASFs by women and children.
format Informe técnico
id CGSpace159429
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2024
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spelling CGSpace1594292024-11-11T08:46:02Z Training of health workers and traditional leaders on maternal and child nutrition and optimal practices for inclusion of animal-source foods in healthy diets in Uganda Ouma, Emily A. Ahumuza, Ronnie Ahmed, Hardi Omosa, Esther Achandi, Esther Ngalombi, Sarah Ahumuza, Laura Teufel, Nils Molina, Teresa animal products capacity building health nutrition An exploratory study conducted by the CGIAR’s Sustainable Animal Productivity for Livelihoods, Nutrition and Gender inclusion (SAPLING) work package 2 in March–April 2023 in Masaka, Mukono and Wakiso districts in Uganda showed nutrition knowledge gaps for both men and women livestock farmers. Results also revealed socio-cultural norms based on beliefs that hinder consumption of some animal-source foods (ASFs) for some members of the society, particularly children and women. For instance, some cultures hinder consumption of ASFs such as eggs, pork and certain types of fish for pregnant women. SAPLING in collaboration with stakeholders co-designed a social behaviour change communication (SBCC) intervention that goes beyond the provision of nutrition education to improve nutrition knowledge but also focuses on addressing norms to demystify consumption of ASFs by children and women of childbearing age. The intervention was implemented by health workers, specifically the village health teams (VHTs) through a cluster-randomized controlled trial design with three study arms in Mukono and Masaka districts as follows: 1. T0 - One third of the clusters (villages) were randomly assigned to receive nutrition information provided only to women using adapted Ministry of Health's Maternal Infant and Young Children Adolescent Nutrition (MIYCAN) counselling cards. 2. T0+T1: - One third of the clusters were randomly assigned to receive nutrition information provided to both men and women using MIYCAN counselling cards. 3. T0+T1+T2: The remaining one third of the clusters were randomly assigned to receive nutrition information provided to both men and women using MIYCAN cards and a gender transformative intervention targeting men and women to address social norms associated with consumption of livestock derived foods particularly for women and children. Health workers and traditional leaders selected to implement the SBCC interventions were trained to deliver the interventions for the specific study arms. They were trained in maternal and child nutrition and optimal practices for inclusion of animal-source foods in healthy diets, as well as social norms messaging to demystify consumption of ASFs by women and children. 2024-11-07 2024-11-08T13:48:12Z 2024-11-08T13:48:12Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159429 en Open Access application/pdf International Livestock Research Institute Ouma, E., Ahumuza, R., Ahmed, H., Omosa, E., Achandi, E., Ngalombi, S., Ahumuza, L., Teufel, N. and Molina, T. 2024. Training of health workers and traditional leaders on maternal and child nutrition and optimal practices for inclusion of animal-source foods in healthy diets in Uganda. Kampala, Uganda: ILRI.
spellingShingle animal products
capacity building
health
nutrition
Ouma, Emily A.
Ahumuza, Ronnie
Ahmed, Hardi
Omosa, Esther
Achandi, Esther
Ngalombi, Sarah
Ahumuza, Laura
Teufel, Nils
Molina, Teresa
Training of health workers and traditional leaders on maternal and child nutrition and optimal practices for inclusion of animal-source foods in healthy diets in Uganda
title Training of health workers and traditional leaders on maternal and child nutrition and optimal practices for inclusion of animal-source foods in healthy diets in Uganda
title_full Training of health workers and traditional leaders on maternal and child nutrition and optimal practices for inclusion of animal-source foods in healthy diets in Uganda
title_fullStr Training of health workers and traditional leaders on maternal and child nutrition and optimal practices for inclusion of animal-source foods in healthy diets in Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Training of health workers and traditional leaders on maternal and child nutrition and optimal practices for inclusion of animal-source foods in healthy diets in Uganda
title_short Training of health workers and traditional leaders on maternal and child nutrition and optimal practices for inclusion of animal-source foods in healthy diets in Uganda
title_sort training of health workers and traditional leaders on maternal and child nutrition and optimal practices for inclusion of animal source foods in healthy diets in uganda
topic animal products
capacity building
health
nutrition
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/159429
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