In the wake of the pandemic, it is important to explore remote nutrition education programs during the pre- and postnatal period. This is the second phase of a bigger project, where a 6-week intensive remotely delivered nutrition and health education program called the PREPARE program will be piloted. Prepare stands for "Perinatal Remote Education for Pandemic Resilience", and it is a nutrition and health education program meant for pregnant and lactating women aimed at improving maternal and infant dietary diversity, maternal health literacy and increasing COVID-19 awareness. One hundred women will be selected from a pool of 233 women who completed a baseline survey last year. Fifty of them will receive the intervention and the other 50 will receive a delayed intervention.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
65
The Perinatal Remote Education for Pandemic Resilience (PREARE) program is a 6-week intensive program aimed at increasing maternal and infant dietary diversity as well as maternal health literacy. Modules that will be completed in the program include education on early initiation of breastfeeding, food groups and the benefits of a balanced diet, appropriate meal frequency for mother and infant, and appropriate sources of health information. Information on personal hygiene and COVID-19 hygiene protocols as well as danger signs during pregnancy are included in the module to improve maternal knowledge on safety protocols and pregnancy complications.
University of Ghana
Accra, Ghana
% infants meeting the Minimum Dietary Diversity (MDD)
Dietary diversity refers to the number of food items consumed from WHO classified food groups over a reference period (FAO, 2016). To meet the minimum dietary diversity, infants should have consumed 4 out of 7 food groups based on a 24-hr dietary recall and the WHO food group classification: 1. grains, roots and tubers, 2. legumes and nuts, 3. dairy products (milk, yogurt, cheese), 4. flesh foods (meat, fish, poultry and liver/organ meats), 5. Eggs, 6. vitamin-A rich fruits and vegetables, 7. other fruits and vegetables
Time frame: 6 weeks
% of Mothers meeting the Minimum Dietary Diversity for women (MDD-W)
Number of food items consumed from WHO classified food groups over a reference period (FAO, 2016). To meet the minimum dietary diversity, mothers should have consumed 5 out of 10 food groups based on a 24-hr dietary recall and the WHO food group classification: 1. Grains, white roots and tubers, and plantains, 2. Pulses (beans, peas and lentils) 3. Nuts and seeds 4. Dairy 5. Meat, poultry and fish 6. Eggs 7. Dark green leafy vegetables 8. Other vitamin A-rich fruits and vegetables 9. Other vegetables 10. Other fruits
Time frame: 6 weeks
% of mothers scoring >66% on the maternal health literacy inventory in pregnancy (MHELIP) scale.
Maternal health literacy (MHL) is the cognitive and social skills which determine the motivation and ability of individuals (mothers) to gain access to, understand and use information in ways which maintain and promote health for they and their children (Renkert and Nutbeam, 2001). This will be measured on the maternal health literacy inventory in pregnancy (MHELIP) scale (Taheri et al., 2020).
Time frame: 6 weeks
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