The Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN), a Swiss-based foundation, implemented a complementary feeding project to improve dietary quality among children 6-59 months of age living in Ethiopia by improving demand and access to eggs. Using a quasi-experimental design and two separate cross-sectional surveys at baseline and end-line, the evaluation seeks to determine the effects of the program on egg consumption, availability of eggs, caregivers' behaviours toward eggs, and caregivers' willingness to pay for eggs.
The Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition (GAIN), a Swiss-based foundation, implemented a complementary feeding project to improve dietary quality among children 6-59 months of age living in Ethiopia by improving demand and access to eggs. The complementary feeding project aimed to boost children's consumption of eggs. The intervention incorporated demand creation campaigns and supported selected delivery channels and producers who provided eggs to communities. GAIN's demand creation strategy was designed to complement the Ethiopian government's effort to use social and behavior change communication to encourage consumption of nutritious complementary foods. This campaign was implemented through the existing health extension system. Areas included in the intervention arm received direct support for egg producers and suppliers and an egg demand creation campaign. Supply-side interventions included training for farmers, identification of distribution channels, mapping of retailers, and creation of linkages between egg producers and egg suppliers. Egg demand-creation activities were executed through above-the-line (ATL) and below-the-line (BTL) campaigns. The ATL campaigns included radio messages, bajaja branding, billboard mounting, and digital promotion. The BTL campaigns include market activation, road shows, sensitization workshops for key community groups, door-to-door promotion, and mobile promotion in collaboration with creative agencies and health extension workers. Both sets of activities focused on creating awareness around eggs as a daily nutritious food option for children. Originally, the study intended to also increase availability of, and demand for, commercially-available complementary foods (i.e., Cerifam and Fafa), however, these components of the intervention were not delivered. Therefore, we have removed these components from the description and removed the outcomes that corresponded with these components of the intervention. Using a quasi-experimental design and two separate cross-sectional surveys at baseline and end-line, the evaluation seeks to determine the effects of the program on egg consumption, availability of eggs, caregivers' behaviours toward eggs, and caregivers' willingness to pay for eggs.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
1,132
The study promoted eggs. GAIN provided training to egg farmers to increase their egg production and marketing, helped increase mother's access to eggs by making them more available in local kiosks and getting retailers to display promotional messages around eggs, conducted sensitization workshops with retailers to increase egg purchases, and employed a demand creation campaign.
Deep Dive Research and Consulting PLC
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Change in the number of eggs consumed from baseline to end-line
Change in the average number of eggs consumed in the past 7 days by children 6 to 59 months of age from baseline to end-line in the two study arms
Time frame: From baseline to 22 months
Change in the consumption of eggs from baseline to end-line
Change in the proportion of children 6-59 months of age consuming eggs in the last 7 days and in the last 24 hours from baseline to end-line in the two study arms
Time frame: From baseline to 22 months
Change in household egg production from baseline to end-line
Change in the proportion of households producing eggs from baseline to end-line in the two study arms
Time frame: From baseline to 22 months
Change in egg purchasing from baseline to end-line
Change in the proportion of households that purchased egg in the last month from baseline to end-line in the two study arms
Time frame: From baseline to 22 months
Change in caregivers' (of children 6-59 months) behavioral determinants in the context of feeding eggs to children from baseline to end-line
Change in the mean factor score created from Likert scales of attitudes (attitudes scale, higher score reflects better attitudes towards eggs), norms (norms scale, higher score reflects better norms towards eggs), self-efficacy (self-efficacy scale, higher score reflects better self-efficacy), and intention towards eggs (intent to feed eggs to child, higher score reflects more intent to feed eggs) from baseline to end-line between the two study arms; change will be examined for a meta factor score combining all scales and each scale separately. Values of factor scores are unbounded and can be positive or negative.
Time frame: From baseline to 22 months
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Change in caregivers' willingness to pay for eggs from baseline to end-line
Change in willingness to pay for eggs, using for example the change in mean maximum price that caregivers would be willing to pay for eggs from baseline to endline between the two study arms.
Time frame: From baseline to 22 months