Impact of a diet diversification and health and nutrition counseling program in Madagascar

Background: Due to lack of resources, especially for mothers and children, Madagascar has high levels of malnutrition. Health promotion and education have shown to be effective in increasing health status in limited-resource areas. This study piloted a tailored, four-week health and nutrition couns...

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Main Authors: Emily Owen, Zachary Farris, Haingoniaina Lalatiana Razoliarivelo, Jamie Griffin, Alisha Farris
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: World Public Health Nutrition Association 2021-06-01
Series:World Nutrition
Subjects:
Online Access:https://worldnutritionjournal.org/index.php/wn/article/view/789
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author Emily Owen
Zachary Farris
Haingoniaina Lalatiana Razoliarivelo
Jamie Griffin
Alisha Farris
author_facet Emily Owen
Zachary Farris
Haingoniaina Lalatiana Razoliarivelo
Jamie Griffin
Alisha Farris
author_sort Emily Owen
collection DOAJ
description Background: Due to lack of resources, especially for mothers and children, Madagascar has high levels of malnutrition. Health promotion and education have shown to be effective in increasing health status in limited-resource areas. This study piloted a tailored, four-week health and nutrition counseling program to improve diet diversity and health promoting practices. Methods: Twenty child caregivers were recruited from Andasibe, Madagascar, using snowball sampling, and were provided weekly individualized health counseling with education materials by the research team. Diet, health knowledge, and health behaviors were assessed using a quasi-experimental one-group pre/post-test design. Body mass index, mid-upper arm circumference measurements, and Raman spectroscopy technology assessed nutritional status. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and paired sample t-tests to determine changes. Results: All caregivers were female. More caregivers were within normal limits for Body Mass Index (40%) than underweight or overweight, and most were within normal limits for mid-upper-arm circumference (75%). Significant increases (p≤0.01) were found in caregiver consumption of vitamin A-rich foods, and using treated water to wash fruits and vegetables, though significant increases were not found for children. The majority (80%) increased diet diversity. Participants increased their knowledge of nutrition and non-nutritious foods. Conclusions: Results suggest an individualized approach to health promotion in a limited-resource area can improve diet diversity, knowledge and health practices. Opportunities for further education and research include increasing knowledge of nutrient dense foods, expanding food choice beyond carbohydrate-rich foods, diet diversity importance, and sustaining education efforts beyond project implementation. Strategies highlighted in this research can inform others working in limited-resource areas.
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spelling doaj.art-1d63b258b8fc4d38ae2dd8f3cd5b19142022-12-22T00:20:06ZengWorld Public Health Nutrition AssociationWorld Nutrition2041-97752021-06-0112210.26596/wn.202112221-31Impact of a diet diversification and health and nutrition counseling program in MadagascarEmily OwenZachary FarrisHaingoniaina Lalatiana RazoliariveloJamie GriffinAlisha Farris0Appalachian State University Background: Due to lack of resources, especially for mothers and children, Madagascar has high levels of malnutrition. Health promotion and education have shown to be effective in increasing health status in limited-resource areas. This study piloted a tailored, four-week health and nutrition counseling program to improve diet diversity and health promoting practices. Methods: Twenty child caregivers were recruited from Andasibe, Madagascar, using snowball sampling, and were provided weekly individualized health counseling with education materials by the research team. Diet, health knowledge, and health behaviors were assessed using a quasi-experimental one-group pre/post-test design. Body mass index, mid-upper arm circumference measurements, and Raman spectroscopy technology assessed nutritional status. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and paired sample t-tests to determine changes. Results: All caregivers were female. More caregivers were within normal limits for Body Mass Index (40%) than underweight or overweight, and most were within normal limits for mid-upper-arm circumference (75%). Significant increases (p≤0.01) were found in caregiver consumption of vitamin A-rich foods, and using treated water to wash fruits and vegetables, though significant increases were not found for children. The majority (80%) increased diet diversity. Participants increased their knowledge of nutrition and non-nutritious foods. Conclusions: Results suggest an individualized approach to health promotion in a limited-resource area can improve diet diversity, knowledge and health practices. Opportunities for further education and research include increasing knowledge of nutrient dense foods, expanding food choice beyond carbohydrate-rich foods, diet diversity importance, and sustaining education efforts beyond project implementation. Strategies highlighted in this research can inform others working in limited-resource areas. https://worldnutritionjournal.org/index.php/wn/article/view/789diet diversityhealth promotionnutrition counselingMadagascarmalnutritionResonance Raman Spectroscopy
spellingShingle Emily Owen
Zachary Farris
Haingoniaina Lalatiana Razoliarivelo
Jamie Griffin
Alisha Farris
Impact of a diet diversification and health and nutrition counseling program in Madagascar
World Nutrition
diet diversity
health promotion
nutrition counseling
Madagascar
malnutrition
Resonance Raman Spectroscopy
title Impact of a diet diversification and health and nutrition counseling program in Madagascar
title_full Impact of a diet diversification and health and nutrition counseling program in Madagascar
title_fullStr Impact of a diet diversification and health and nutrition counseling program in Madagascar
title_full_unstemmed Impact of a diet diversification and health and nutrition counseling program in Madagascar
title_short Impact of a diet diversification and health and nutrition counseling program in Madagascar
title_sort impact of a diet diversification and health and nutrition counseling program in madagascar
topic diet diversity
health promotion
nutrition counseling
Madagascar
malnutrition
Resonance Raman Spectroscopy
url https://worldnutritionjournal.org/index.php/wn/article/view/789
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