Delivering an Integrated Package of Maternal Nutrition Services in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana (India)

Vani Sethi, Khyati Tiwari, Neha Sareen, Suneeta Singh, Chittaranjan Mishra, M Jagadeeshwar, K Sunitha, S Vijay Kumar, Arjan de Wagt, H P S Sachdev, Vani Sethi, Khyati Tiwari, Neha Sareen, Suneeta Singh, Chittaranjan Mishra, M Jagadeeshwar, K Sunitha, S Vijay Kumar, Arjan de Wagt, H P S Sachdev

Abstract

Background: Maternal spot feeding programs operational in southern Indian States are providing a package of nutrition services (food, micronutrient supplementation, deworming, gestation weight gain monitoring, and fortnightly nutrition health education) to pregnant women. These remain to be evaluated.

Objective: We evaluated the maternal spot feeding programs in 2 Southern Indian states.

Methods: Study design was cross-sectional entailing primary data collection (July to November 2016) on 360 pregnant and lactating women (of infants aged 0-6 months) per state and a review of the scheme's management information system (MIS) beneficiaries' records for the time period April 2014 to August 2017. To gain program functioning insights, open-ended interviews (n = 252) with state, district, and block program managers a state-level open space technology workshop was conducted.

Results: Average days of meal consumption ranged from 19 to 21 days per month; spot meal enhanced high dietary diversity (≥6 food groups; 57%-59%) and consumption of eggs and milk (74%-96%) among pregnant and lactating women. On-the-spot consumption of iron, folic acid, calcium, and deworming was 18%, 87%, and 56%, respectively; 94% attended at least 1 of the 2 nutrition monthly counseling sessions. Majority (68%) of the beneficiaries were motivated to enroll by self-help groups or family members, suggesting the crucial persuasive role of peers and family members.

Conclusion: Maternal spot feeding schemes can potentially deliver nutrition interventions outlined in the World Health Organization antenatal care guidelines 2016 for a positive pregnancy outcome. Research on schemes' impact on birth outcomes, maternal depression, social norms, and its cost-effectiveness is needed.

Keywords: India; maternal nutrition; maternal spot feeding; pregnancy.

Source: PubMed

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