An Investigation into the Differences in Coverage and Compliance of a Micronutrient Supplement Program for Children in Rupandehi and Palpa, Nepal

Background: Malnutrition is a global problem, with its effects being more strongly accentuated in developing countries. In an effort to reduce the issue of child malnutrition in Nepal, UNICEF and Max Pro have devised a programme which provides children under the age of two year with a multiple micro...

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Format: Technical Report
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
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Online Access:http://103.69.126.140:8080/handle/123456789/197
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spelling oai:103.69.126.140:123456789-1972022-11-08T10:29:28Z An Investigation into the Differences in Coverage and Compliance of a Micronutrient Supplement Program for Children in Rupandehi and Palpa, Nepal Nutrition and Food Safety children compliance coverage malnutrition micronutrient Background: Malnutrition is a global problem, with its effects being more strongly accentuated in developing countries. In an effort to reduce the issue of child malnutrition in Nepal, UNICEF and Max Pro have devised a programme which provides children under the age of two year with a multiple micronutrient powder. This supplement has been a success; however, there are varying levels of coverage between districts. The aim of this project was to find reasons behind the differing coverage and compliance of children in two of Nepal’s districts. Methods: A qualitative study was carried out in two districts of Nepal. There were 18 participants in total: 12 mothers, 4 female community health volunteers and two health-in-charges. Each was interviewed, eliciting their understanding of the programme and its perceived strengths and weaknesses. Thoughts and experiences described in the responses were analyzed thematically. Results: There were varying levels of attendance of mothers at the teaching sessions conducted by FCHVs, and in some areas no teaching sessions were available. Many mothers had work commitments which they prioritized over the programme. Side effects of the supplement also deterred mothers from giving it to their children. FCHVs were also noted to be more inactive in certain villages. Their ability to convey information to mothers also varied between areas. Conclusions: The reason behind difference in coverage and compliance is a multi-factorial problem, predominantly affected by the actions of mothers and FCHVs. Distribution and geographical location of health facilities had less of an impact. Keywords: children; compliance; coverage; malnutrition; micronutrient. 2016-11-13T13:13:27Z 2022-11-08T10:11:02Z 2016-11-13T13:13:27Z 2022-11-08T10:11:02Z 2013 Technical Report http://103.69.126.140:8080/handle/123456789/197 en_US application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
institution My University
collection DSpace
language en_US
topic children
compliance
coverage
malnutrition
micronutrient
spellingShingle children
compliance
coverage
malnutrition
micronutrient
An Investigation into the Differences in Coverage and Compliance of a Micronutrient Supplement Program for Children in Rupandehi and Palpa, Nepal
description Background: Malnutrition is a global problem, with its effects being more strongly accentuated in developing countries. In an effort to reduce the issue of child malnutrition in Nepal, UNICEF and Max Pro have devised a programme which provides children under the age of two year with a multiple micronutrient powder. This supplement has been a success; however, there are varying levels of coverage between districts. The aim of this project was to find reasons behind the differing coverage and compliance of children in two of Nepal’s districts. Methods: A qualitative study was carried out in two districts of Nepal. There were 18 participants in total: 12 mothers, 4 female community health volunteers and two health-in-charges. Each was interviewed, eliciting their understanding of the programme and its perceived strengths and weaknesses. Thoughts and experiences described in the responses were analyzed thematically. Results: There were varying levels of attendance of mothers at the teaching sessions conducted by FCHVs, and in some areas no teaching sessions were available. Many mothers had work commitments which they prioritized over the programme. Side effects of the supplement also deterred mothers from giving it to their children. FCHVs were also noted to be more inactive in certain villages. Their ability to convey information to mothers also varied between areas. Conclusions: The reason behind difference in coverage and compliance is a multi-factorial problem, predominantly affected by the actions of mothers and FCHVs. Distribution and geographical location of health facilities had less of an impact. Keywords: children; compliance; coverage; malnutrition; micronutrient.
format Technical Report
title An Investigation into the Differences in Coverage and Compliance of a Micronutrient Supplement Program for Children in Rupandehi and Palpa, Nepal
title_short An Investigation into the Differences in Coverage and Compliance of a Micronutrient Supplement Program for Children in Rupandehi and Palpa, Nepal
title_full An Investigation into the Differences in Coverage and Compliance of a Micronutrient Supplement Program for Children in Rupandehi and Palpa, Nepal
title_fullStr An Investigation into the Differences in Coverage and Compliance of a Micronutrient Supplement Program for Children in Rupandehi and Palpa, Nepal
title_full_unstemmed An Investigation into the Differences in Coverage and Compliance of a Micronutrient Supplement Program for Children in Rupandehi and Palpa, Nepal
title_sort investigation into the differences in coverage and compliance of a micronutrient supplement program for children in rupandehi and palpa, nepal
publishDate 2016
url http://103.69.126.140:8080/handle/123456789/197
_version_ 1761500936457420800