Formative research in Ethiopia and Bangladesh: Strengthening household survey measures of maternal micronutrient supplementation in low- and middle-income countries

Background As countries transition from iron folic acid (IFA) to multiple micronutrient supplements (MMS) for pregnant women, they need accurate data on who is being reached with these interventions. The aim of our formative research in Ethiopia and Bangladesh was to design updated household survey...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Walton, Shelley, Wood, Ellina, Berhane, Hanna Y., Workneh, Firehiwot, Ferdaweke, Fiker, Billah, Sk Masum, Lotus, Sharif Uddin, Munos, Melinda, Kim, Sunny S., Manohar, Swetha, Nguyen, Phuong Hong, Azeem, Syed Shehryar, Heidkamp, Rebecca
Format: Preprint
Language:Inglés
Published: Gates Foundation 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179920
Description
Summary:Background As countries transition from iron folic acid (IFA) to multiple micronutrient supplements (MMS) for pregnant women, they need accurate data on who is being reached with these interventions. The aim of our formative research in Ethiopia and Bangladesh was to design updated household survey questions, response options, and visual aids to measure coverage of prenatal micronutrient supplements. Methods In Phase I, we landscaped health providers and retailers to identify prenatal micronutrient products available in each country and interviewed currently pregnant women (CPW) and recently delivered women (RDW) about how they differentiated among micronutrient products. In Phase II, we used these findings to draft survey questions and visual aids. In Phase III, we iteratively tested and refined the draft tools through cognitive interviews with women. Results The total number of study participants, including CPW, RDW, healthcare workers, and retailers, was 73 in Ethiopia and 132 in Bangladesh. Women in both contexts distinguished among micronutrient products based on color, shape, packaging, and perceived purpose. In cognitive tests, women generally understood the English term “iron” as a catch-all term for any iron-containing supplement. No specific term for multivitamin or MMS was consistently recognized by women. Shorter recalls of 7 days or 1 month for adherence were feasible for respondents. Conclusions It is challenging to identify terms and images that help women distinguish between supplement types. The final set of questions are feasible for adaptation and use in multi-topic surveys, in contexts with MMS but require validation.