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Assessing Program Coverage of Two Approaches to Distributing a Complementary Feeding Supplement to Infants and Young Children in Ghana

The work reported here assesses the coverage achieved by two sales-based approaches to distributing a complementary food supplement (KOKO Plus(™)) to infants and young children in Ghana. Delivery Model 1 was conducted in the Northern Region of Ghana and used a mixture of health extension workers (de...

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Autores principales: Aaron, Grant J., Strutt, Nicholas, Boateng, Nathaniel Amoh, Guevarra, Ernest, Siling, Katja, Norris, Alison, Ghosh, Shibani, Nyamikeh, Mercy, Attiogbe, Antoine, Burns, Richard, Foriwa, Esi, Toride, Yasuhiko, Kitamura, Satoshi, Tano-Debrah, Kwaku, Sarpong, Daniel, Myatt, Mark
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5068796/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27755554
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0162462
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author Aaron, Grant J.
Strutt, Nicholas
Boateng, Nathaniel Amoh
Guevarra, Ernest
Siling, Katja
Norris, Alison
Ghosh, Shibani
Nyamikeh, Mercy
Attiogbe, Antoine
Burns, Richard
Foriwa, Esi
Toride, Yasuhiko
Kitamura, Satoshi
Tano-Debrah, Kwaku
Sarpong, Daniel
Myatt, Mark
author_facet Aaron, Grant J.
Strutt, Nicholas
Boateng, Nathaniel Amoh
Guevarra, Ernest
Siling, Katja
Norris, Alison
Ghosh, Shibani
Nyamikeh, Mercy
Attiogbe, Antoine
Burns, Richard
Foriwa, Esi
Toride, Yasuhiko
Kitamura, Satoshi
Tano-Debrah, Kwaku
Sarpong, Daniel
Myatt, Mark
author_sort Aaron, Grant J.
collection PubMed
description The work reported here assesses the coverage achieved by two sales-based approaches to distributing a complementary food supplement (KOKO Plus(™)) to infants and young children in Ghana. Delivery Model 1 was conducted in the Northern Region of Ghana and used a mixture of health extension workers (delivering behavior change communications and demand creation activities at primary healthcare centers and in the community) and petty traders recruited from among beneficiaries of a local microfinance initiative (responsible for the sale of the complementary food supplement at market stalls and house to house). Delivery Model 2 was conducted in the Eastern Region of Ghana and used a market-based approach, with the product being sold through micro-retail routes (i.e., small shops and roadside stalls) in three districts supported by behavior change communications and demand creation activities led by a local social marketing company. Both delivery models were implemented sub-nationally as 1-year pilot programs, with the aim of informing the design of a scaled-up program. A series of cross-sectional coverage surveys was implemented in each program area. Results from these surveys show that Delivery Model 1 was successful in achieving and sustaining high (i.e., 86%) effective coverage (i.e., the child had been given the product at least once in the previous 7 days) during implementation. Effective coverage fell to 62% within 3 months of the behavior change communications and demand creation activities stopping. Delivery Model 2 was successful in raising awareness of the product (i.e., 90% message coverage), but effective coverage was low (i.e., 9.4%). Future programming efforts should use the health extension / microfinance / petty trader approach in rural settings and consider adapting this approach for use in urban and peri-urban settings. Ongoing behavior change communications and demand creation activities is likely to be essential to the continued success of such programming.
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spelling pubmed-50687962016-10-27 Assessing Program Coverage of Two Approaches to Distributing a Complementary Feeding Supplement to Infants and Young Children in Ghana Aaron, Grant J. Strutt, Nicholas Boateng, Nathaniel Amoh Guevarra, Ernest Siling, Katja Norris, Alison Ghosh, Shibani Nyamikeh, Mercy Attiogbe, Antoine Burns, Richard Foriwa, Esi Toride, Yasuhiko Kitamura, Satoshi Tano-Debrah, Kwaku Sarpong, Daniel Myatt, Mark PLoS One Research Article The work reported here assesses the coverage achieved by two sales-based approaches to distributing a complementary food supplement (KOKO Plus(™)) to infants and young children in Ghana. Delivery Model 1 was conducted in the Northern Region of Ghana and used a mixture of health extension workers (delivering behavior change communications and demand creation activities at primary healthcare centers and in the community) and petty traders recruited from among beneficiaries of a local microfinance initiative (responsible for the sale of the complementary food supplement at market stalls and house to house). Delivery Model 2 was conducted in the Eastern Region of Ghana and used a market-based approach, with the product being sold through micro-retail routes (i.e., small shops and roadside stalls) in three districts supported by behavior change communications and demand creation activities led by a local social marketing company. Both delivery models were implemented sub-nationally as 1-year pilot programs, with the aim of informing the design of a scaled-up program. A series of cross-sectional coverage surveys was implemented in each program area. Results from these surveys show that Delivery Model 1 was successful in achieving and sustaining high (i.e., 86%) effective coverage (i.e., the child had been given the product at least once in the previous 7 days) during implementation. Effective coverage fell to 62% within 3 months of the behavior change communications and demand creation activities stopping. Delivery Model 2 was successful in raising awareness of the product (i.e., 90% message coverage), but effective coverage was low (i.e., 9.4%). Future programming efforts should use the health extension / microfinance / petty trader approach in rural settings and consider adapting this approach for use in urban and peri-urban settings. Ongoing behavior change communications and demand creation activities is likely to be essential to the continued success of such programming. Public Library of Science 2016-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC5068796/ /pubmed/27755554 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0162462 Text en © 2016 Aaron et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Aaron, Grant J.
Strutt, Nicholas
Boateng, Nathaniel Amoh
Guevarra, Ernest
Siling, Katja
Norris, Alison
Ghosh, Shibani
Nyamikeh, Mercy
Attiogbe, Antoine
Burns, Richard
Foriwa, Esi
Toride, Yasuhiko
Kitamura, Satoshi
Tano-Debrah, Kwaku
Sarpong, Daniel
Myatt, Mark
Assessing Program Coverage of Two Approaches to Distributing a Complementary Feeding Supplement to Infants and Young Children in Ghana
title Assessing Program Coverage of Two Approaches to Distributing a Complementary Feeding Supplement to Infants and Young Children in Ghana
title_full Assessing Program Coverage of Two Approaches to Distributing a Complementary Feeding Supplement to Infants and Young Children in Ghana
title_fullStr Assessing Program Coverage of Two Approaches to Distributing a Complementary Feeding Supplement to Infants and Young Children in Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Assessing Program Coverage of Two Approaches to Distributing a Complementary Feeding Supplement to Infants and Young Children in Ghana
title_short Assessing Program Coverage of Two Approaches to Distributing a Complementary Feeding Supplement to Infants and Young Children in Ghana
title_sort assessing program coverage of two approaches to distributing a complementary feeding supplement to infants and young children in ghana
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5068796/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27755554
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0162462
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