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Active clinical trials for "Malnutrition"

Results 611-620 of 1358

Effectiveness of SNF and SBCC to Prevent Stunting Among Children in Afghanistan: a Quasi-experimental...

StuntingMalnutrition1 more

Over the years, there has been some progress made in reducing stunting in Afghanistan, the prevalence remains high with half of the provinces experiencing rates above the WHO alert threshold. As part of the Country Strategic Plan (CSP), the World Food Programme (WFP) plans to implement a stunting prevention programme in collaboration with Ministry of Public Health (MoPH) through its Public Nutrition Department (PND) in selected locations with stunting rates above 45%. The programme will emphasis on appropriate nutrition support in the '1000 days' window of opportunity with special focus on proven effective nutrition interventions such appropriate breast feeding, complementary feeding, micronutrient supplementation, malnutrition treatment and prevention, WASH.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

One Nutrition in Complex Environments (ONCE)

Nutrition PoorAflatoxins Toxicity1 more

This study asks the research question "Does enabling families (particularly mothers and other caregivers) to 'assess and act' on drivers of malnutrition through a targeted SBC+ package succeed in a sustained reduction of risk factors thereby improving child health and nutrition?" This study aims to implement and measure the effects of a multi-level multi-sectoral behavior change information intervention in Agago District of Northern Uganda and determine potential for scale up in a complex environment. The study design is a three-arm cluster randomized controlled superiority design (cRCT) with a 1:1:1 allocation ratio. The study arms will be: Group 1: NIPP arm; Group 2: NIPP+ arm; and Group 3: Non-intervention control arm. A barrier analysis will be conducted to ensure appropriate targeting and contextualization of the NIPP and NIPP+ approaches prior to implementation. Each intervention arm will receive a 12-week intervention (NIPP or NIPP+) with active monitoring and longitudinal follow ups post intervention at 2, 6, and 12-months post-intervention. The total sample size for the Barrier Analysis will be a maximum of 450 caregivers; for the main intervention, 900 households (300/arm) will be purposely sampled from the randomly selected communities. Respondents for the qualitative portion will be purposely selected.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Double Duty Interventions on Double Burden of Malnutrition Among School Adolescents...

Malnutrition; DegreeModerate5 more

The goal of this cluster randomized controlled trial is to determine the effect of double duty interventions on double burden of malnutrition, dietary diversity score, and frequency of morbidity among secondary school adolescents in Debre Berhan City, Ethiopia. The main aim is to answer the following questions. What is the effect of double duty interventions on double burden of malnutrition among secondary school adolescents? What is the effect of double duty interventions on dietary diversity score among secondary school adolescents? What is the effect of double duty interventions on among secondary school adolescents?

Completed5 enrollment criteria

FoodnGo-Empower: A Feasibility Study of Physical Activities and Nutrition of Older Patients by the...

MalnutritionPhysical Activity

The research and innovation programme Food´n´Go - Empower aims to develop, test and implement health technology solutions for active involvement and increased empowerment of elderly patients and their relatives solving well-known problem areas as malnutrition and inactivity. The prototype was developed in 2013. The project is a collaboration between departement of internal medicine in Copenhagen University Hospital, one local municipality and a private it-company. The technology is a tablet computer, used by elderly patients to order and register food intake during hospitalization. The tablet is also used to get inspiration for physical activities during hospital admission and after discharge and for registration of physical activities. The aim of this study is to test if an adjusted version of the Food´n´Go technology through active involvement of the elderly patient can prevent weightloss and loss of muscle strength during hospitalization and after discharge.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Translating Adoption of Improved Varieties Into Nutritional Impact

Malnutrition

The purposes of this study are (1) to determine whether child nutrition-focused adoption encouragement messages focused on Quality Protein Maize (QPM) and the availability of small quantities of QPM seed can be effective at increasing QPM adoption and health outcomes for young children, and (2) to determine whether consumption encouragement messages and techniques (e.g., containers for earmarking) can be effective at increasing QPM targeting to and health outcomes for young children.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Effects of Fortified Complementary Foods on Vitamin A Status and Body Pool Size in Ghanaian Infants....

Malnutrition

This study tried to prove that children given food supplements containing vitamin A would have better liver vitamin A stores than children given food supplements without vitamin A over a 5 month period.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Promoting Health During Pregnancy: A Multiple Behavior Computer Tailored Intervention

Life StressSmoking Cessation1 more

This program of research tested the effectiveness of an iPad delivered multiple behavior intervention grounded in the Transtheoretical Model of Behavior Change for pregnant women. It was hypothesized that the intervention would reduce the number of health behavior risks reported by pregnant women in the treatment group. The target behaviors of the intervention are smoking cessation and relapse prevention, stress management, and fruit and vegetable consumption.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Project Grow Smart: Intervention Trial of Multiple Micronutrients and Early Learning Among Infants...

Nutritional DeficienciesDevelopmental Delay

Project Grow Smart evaluates the impact fortification with multiple micronutrient powders (MNP) vs. placebo (one vitamin) on child development (primary outcome) and on micronutrient status, growth, and morbidity (secondary outcomes) among young children in rural India (Nalgonda district of Telegana). There is an infant phase and a preschool phase; investigators, study team members, and participants are unaware of whether the fortification is MNP vs. placebo. The infant phase (enrollment age: 6-14 months) is a 4-cell factorial randomized trial (MNP vs. placebo and early learning vs. routine care), conducted through home visits. Sachets (MNP/placebo) are distributed to be mixed with food. The hypotheses in the infant phase are: 1) MNP leads to better development, growth, and micronutrient status; 2) Early learning leads to better development; 3) Integrated MNP plus early learning leads to better development through both additive and synergistic processes. Developmental evaluations and anthropometric measurements are conducted at baseline, mid-line (6 months), and end-line (12 months). Blood draws for micronutrient status are performed at baseline and endline. Morbidity measures are collected monthly using a morbidity form, modeled after the Demographic and Health Survey. The preschool phase (enrollment age: 30-48 months) is conducted in Anganwadi Centers (AWC) (preschools). AWC are classified as high or low stimulation, based on an objective observational rating system of the physical environment of the preschools and teacher-child interactions. Preschools are categorized into high/low-quality based on median split, followed by random assignment of MNP/placebo nested within high/low-quality preschools. The hypotheses in the preschool phase are: 1)MNP leads to better development, growth, and micronutrient status; 2) the effect of the MNP on preschoolers' development varies by the quality of the AWC, with stronger effects among preschoolers in high-quality AWCs. The intervention has been modified to coincide with the academic term (September-May). Evaluations are conducted at baseline (September) and end-line (prior to May), with an 8-month intervention period.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Effectiveness of LNS and MNP Supplements to Prevent Malnutrition in Women and Their Children in...

Malnutrition

The program effectiveness study aims to assess the effect of a lipid-based nutrition supplement (LNS) and micronutrient powder (MNP) provided in a programmatic context for improving maternal nutritional status during pregnancy and lactation (LNS only), and preventing malnutrition in infants and young children (LNS and MNP) in Bangladesh.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Effectiveness and Cost-Effectiveness of Four Formulations of Food Supplements for the Prevention...

Child Malnutrition

This research will serve as a follow-up on the review of Title II commodities performed by the Food Aid Quality Review at Tufts University in October 2011. The study in Burkina Faso will test the relative effectiveness and cost effectiveness of four supplementary foods in the prevention of MAM and stunting in normal programmatic settings. The aims of this study are to: To compare the effectiveness of four alternative supplementary food commodities in preventing stunting and wasting, and promoting linear growth in children 6 - 23 months in the context of a preventive supplementary feeding program in Burkina Faso. To estimate the relative cost of implementing the supplementary feeding program using each commodity To estimate the relative cost/effectiveness of implementing the program using each commodity.

Completed31 enrollment criteria
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