2019
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0210836
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Context for layering women’s nutrition interventions on a large scale poverty alleviation program: Evidence from three eastern Indian states

Abstract: Over 70 million women of reproductive age are undernourished in India. Most poverty alleviation programs have not been systematically evaluated to assess impact on women’s empowerment and nutrition outcomes. National Rural Livelihoods Mission’s poverty alleviation and livelihoods generation initiative is an opportune platform to layer women’s nutrition interventions being tapped by project Swabhimaan in three eastern Indian states—Bihar, Chhattisgarh and Odisha. A cross-sectional baseline survey covering 8755 … Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“… 41 45 51 63 66 Some researchers argued that the social cohesion of SHGs would make add-on health education interventions more effective. 12 74–79 Yet several empirical studies identified barriers to integrating health interventions into SHGs: limited priority and time for health, exclusion of the most vulnerable and instability of the ‘platform’ due to group dissolution and irregular meetings. 33 42 50 56 80–83 Finally, some studies argued that women’s groups could support health interventions through partnerships with government to monitor accountability as well as engage and mobilise communities, which appeared feasible in rural and urban settings.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“… 41 45 51 63 66 Some researchers argued that the social cohesion of SHGs would make add-on health education interventions more effective. 12 74–79 Yet several empirical studies identified barriers to integrating health interventions into SHGs: limited priority and time for health, exclusion of the most vulnerable and instability of the ‘platform’ due to group dissolution and irregular meetings. 33 42 50 56 80–83 Finally, some studies argued that women’s groups could support health interventions through partnerships with government to monitor accountability as well as engage and mobilise communities, which appeared feasible in rural and urban settings.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… 28 29 32 Observational studies reported limited coverage of young mothers in SHGs 100 101 : specific to RMNCH interventions, only one in four mothers with children under 2 years were SHG members in three states. 12 Stability of groups varied: 27% of original microfinance and health groups in rural Bihar dissolved over a 1-year study period 34 and open groups in Mumbai had 30% annual population turnover, 32 while rural, open groups and sex worker collectives sustained participation over longer intervention periods. 59 95 Lastly, intergenerational participation in groups was noted as important to address culturally rooted practices or household dynamics where mothers-in-law and family play an important role, such as birthing practices or domestic violence.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Ethical approval was taken from the Institutional Ethics Committee of All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) of the respective states, namely, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, and Odisha. The impact evaluation was registered with the Registry for International Development Impact Evaluations (RIDIE-STUDY-ID-58261b2f46876) and the National Clinical Trials Registry of India with trial number CTRI/2016/11/007482 (33). Verbal consent was obtained from interviewed pregnant women.…”
Section: Ethical Clearancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The recently launched Anemia Mukt Bharat (Anemia free India) includes adolescent girls, newlywed and young married women (20–24 years) as target beneficiaries which could be tapped for reaching out with a larger package of nutritional interventions of supplementation, counselling and treatment if needed [26]. Community models that reach out to newlywed women or couples and link income generation to nutrition are also available for testing feasibility of scale-up [46].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%