The effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of cash plus interventions to prevent acute malnutrition in Somalia: evidence from an adaptive cluster randomised control trial.
IF 4.3 3区 医学Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Nadia Akseer, Kemish Kenneth Alier, Samantha Grounds, Sydney Garretson, Sagal Mohamud, Qundeel Khattak, Marina Tripaldi, Fabrizio Loddo, Said Aden Mohamoud, Adan Yusuf Mahdi, Mohamoud Ali Nur, Sadiq Mohamed Abdiqadir, Emily Mitchell, Andreas Kees, Mohamed Billow Mahat, Maimun Gure, Dahir Isaq Jibril, Dahir Gedi, Michael Ocircan P'Rajom, Meftuh Omer, Abdullahi Farah, Mohamed Abdirashid Osman, Abdiaziz Mohamed Adan, Farhan Mohamed Mohamoud, Abdullahi Muse Mohamoud, Abdifatah Ahmed Mohamed, Abdulkadir Ali Abdi, Adam Abdulkadir, Shelley Walton
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Acute malnutrition affects millions of children aged <5 years, as well as pregnant and lactating women globally, especially in humanitarian settings. Although cash plus interventions - cash or food transfers combined with complementary components - are widely implemented, evidence remains limited on which combinations and durations are most effective at preventing acute malnutrition.
Methods: We conducted a three-arm cluster-randomised trial within the 'Save the Children's Cash Plus for Nutrition' programme in Somalia. Monthly support was provided as cash alone (arm 1), cash plus social and behaviour change communication (arm 2), or cash plus an additional cash top-up (arm 3). Further, we randomised 33 villages across arms, targeting approximately 1500 households. Primary outcomes included the prevalence and incidence of acute malnutrition in children aged 6-59 months and in mothers, assessed at baseline, midline (three months), and endline (six months). We also conducted market monitoring, qualitative data collection, and analysis.
Results: Child acute malnutrition prevalence was approximately 15.0% in each arm at baseline. After three months, prevalence declined by 2.0 percentage points in arm 1 to 13.0% (95% confidence interval (CI) = 10.3, 16.1), representing a relative reduction of 13.3%. In arm 2, prevalence declined by 5.9 percentage points to 9.1% (95% CI = 6.8, 11.8), a relative reduction of 39.3%. In contrast, prevalence in arm 3 remained essentially unchanged, increasing to 15.1% (95% CI = 12.1, 18.6). By endline, there was little change from midline in all arms. Maternal malnutrition improved most in arm 2, but differences were not statistically significant. All arms showed improvements in dietary diversity and food security, but only arm 2 achieved sustained nutrition gains. Household livelihood conditions appeared to improve overall, though monthly expenditures nearly doubled. Arm 2 was the most effective and cost-effective.
Conclusions: Adding social and behaviour change communication to cash transfers significantly improved child nutrition compared to cash alone, highlighting that integrated approaches can enhance nutritional outcomes and at minimal additional cost in humanitarian settings.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Global Health is a peer-reviewed journal published by the Edinburgh University Global Health Society, a not-for-profit organization registered in the UK. We publish editorials, news, viewpoints, original research and review articles in two issues per year.