| BMC Public Health | |
| Complementary school garden, nutrition, water, sanitation and hygiene interventions to improve children’s nutrition and health status in Burkina Faso and Nepal: a study protocol | |
| Ray-yu Yang1  Serge Diagbouga2  Subodh Sharma3  Akina Shrestha4  Séverine Erismann4  Christian Schindler4  Peter Odermatt4  Ramona Herz4  Jana Gerold4  Astrid Knoblauch4  Guéladio Cissé4  Jürg Utzinger4  Axel Drescher5  | |
| [1] AVRDC - The World Vegetable Center;Institut de Recherches en Sciences de la Santé;Kathmandu University;Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute;University of Freiburg; | |
| 关键词: Burkina Faso; Malnutrition; Nepal; Parasitic infections; School-aged children; Study protocol; | |
| DOI : 10.1186/s12889-016-2910-7 | |
| 来源: DOAJ | |
【 摘 要 】
Abstract Background Malnutrition and intestinal parasitic infections are common among children in Burkina Faso and Nepal. However, specific health-related data in school-aged children in these two countries are scarce. In the frame of a larger multi-stakeholder project entitled “Vegetables go to School: Improving Nutrition through Agricultural Diversification” (VgtS), a study has been designed with the objectives to: (i) describe schoolchildren’s health status in Burkina Faso and Nepal; and to (ii) provide an evidence-base for programme decisions on the relevance of complementary school garden, nutrition, water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) interventions. Methods/Design The studies will be conducted in the Centre Ouest and the Plateau Central regions of Burkina Faso and the Dolakha and Ramechhap districts of Nepal. Data will be collected and combined at the level of schools, children and their households. A range of indicators will be used to examine nutritional status, intestinal parasitic infections and WASH conditions in 24 schools among 1144 children aged 8–14 years at baseline and a 1-year follow-up. The studies are designed as cluster randomised trials and the schools will be assigned to two core study arms: (i) the ‘complementary school garden, nutrition and WASH intervention’ arm; and the (ii) ‘control’ arm with no interventions. Children will be subjected to parasitological examinations using stool and urine samples and to quality-controlled anthropometric and haemoglobin measurements. Drinking water will be assessed for contamination with coliform bacteria and faecal streptococci. A questionnaire survey on nutritional and health knowledge, attitudes and practices (KAP) will be administered to children and their caregivers, also assessing socioeconomic, food-security and WASH conditions at household level. Focus group and key-informant interviews on children’s nutrition and hygiene perceptions and behaviours will be conducted with their caregivers and school personnel. Discussion The studies will contribute to fill a data gap on school-aged children in Burkina Faso and Nepal. The data collected will also serve to inform the design of school-based interventions and will contribute to deepen the understanding of potential effects of these interventions to improve schoolchildren’s health in resource-constrained settings. Key findings will be used to provide guidance for the implementation of health policies at the school level in Burkina Faso and Nepal. Trial registration ISRCTN17968589 (date assigned: 17 July 2015)
【 授权许可】
Unknown