Wasting (severe thinness) is a common and serious problem among young children in rural Guinea-Bissau. Community Health Agents (CHAs) can help prevent malnutrition by regularly measuring children's growth and advising families on nutritious local foods. However, this practice is not consistently implemented. This pilot study will test whether implementing Regular Growth Monitoring (RGM) by CHAs every month is feasible and effective in reducing malnutrition among children aged 6 months to 5 years in two rural villages. Investigators will also compare three methods for measuring mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC), which is used to detect malnutrition: the standard WHO tape measure, a photograph of the arm, and a simple bracelet. The goal is to identify which method is easiest for CHAs to use reliably. Baseline and final measurements will be taken in both villages. One village will receive the monthly RGM intervention first, followed by the second village. Families will also be asked about their experiences with the program through brief questionnaires.
Wasting is prevalent in rural Guinea-Bissau villages and adversely affects child health and cognitive development long-term. Prior work by this team of investigators suggests that regular feedback from Community Health Agents (CHAs) to caregivers, including recommendations of locally available nutritious recipes for at-risk children, may reduce the incidence of moderate acute malnutrition (MAM) and severe acute malnutrition (SAM). However, routine growth monitoring (RGM) has been largely unfeasible at the village level due to measurement complexity and limited training resources. Modern technology and artificial intelligence may help make this more scalable. This is a proof-of-concept, sequential pilot study conducted in two villages in Guinea-Bissau with which the team has an established relationship. Baseline anthropometric measurements will be collected on all eligible children (aged 6 months to 5 years, without SAM at enrollment) in both villages. Children identified with SAM at baseline will be referred to the local malnutrition clinic and excluded from the study. One village will begin the RGM intervention immediately after baseline data collection. The second village will begin the intervention after final data collection in the first village. Assignment order will be by PI decision rather than randomization, as required by the collaborating UCSF team members. During the RGM period, CHAs will screen each child monthly using all three mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) methods: (1) WHO tape measure (reference standard), (2) arm photograph, and (3) bracelet. Data will be entered into a secure REDCap database. Children meeting SAM criteria (by tape measure) will be referred to tertiary care; children with MAM will receive weekly CHA nutrition education on local recipes. Measurements collected at baseline and end-of-study include: weight, height, MUAC by all three methods, skinfold thicknesses (biceps and triceps), and family demographics. After study completion, brief questionnaires will be administered to parents, CHAs, and Ministry of Health staff to assess perceived effects, acceptability, feasibility, and preferences among the monitoring methods. This study has been approved by both the Dartmouth College CPHS and the Ministry of Health in Guinea-Bissau.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
400
Monthly malnutrition screening by Community Health Agents (CHAs) using three MUAC methods: (1) WHO standard tape measure, (2) arm photograph for remote review, and (3) a solid bracelet device. The tape measure is the reference standard. Children identified with SAM are referred to a tertiary malnutrition clinic; children with MAM have their caregivers provided with weekly education on using local nutritious recipes to support recovery. Data are entered into REDCap and reviewed remotely by the US research team.
Two villages in rural Guinea-Bissau
Bissau, Bissau Region, Guinea-Bissau
Prevalence of severe acute malnutrition (SAM)
Proportion of enrolled children meeting SAM criteria (by WHO tape measure MUAC) at study completion, compared between early-start and delayed-start villages.
Time frame: Baseline to study completion (~4 months)
Prevalence of moderate acute malnutrition (MAM)
Proportion of enrolled children meeting MAM criteria (by WHO tape measure MUAC) at study completion, compared between early-start and delayed-start villages.
Time frame: Baseline to study completion (~4 months)
Weight-for-length z-score
Change in weight-for-length z-score between baseline and final assessment, compared between early-start and delayed-start villages
Time frame: Baseline to study completion (~4 months)
Weight-for-age z-score
Change in weight-for-age z-score between baseline and final assessment, compared between early-start and delayed-start villages.
Time frame: Baseline to study completion (~4 months)
Length-for-age z-score
Change in length-for-age z-score between baseline and final assessment, compared between early-start and delayed-start villages
Time frame: Baseline and study completion (~4 months)
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