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The Livestock for Health Study: A Field Trial on Livestock Interventions to Prevent Acute Malnutrition among Women and Children in Pastoralist Communities in Northern Kenya.

Samuel M. Thumbi,Josphat Muema,Nyamai Mutono,Joseph Njuguna,Christine Jost,Erin Boyd, Daniel Tewoldeberhan, Immaculate Mutua, George Gacharamu, Francis Wambua, Rob Allport, Emmanuella Olesambu,Abdal Monium Osman, Darana Souza, Irene Kimani,Julius Oyugi,Zipporah Bukania,Harriet Oboge,Guy H. Palmer,Jonathan Yoder

Food and nutrition bulletin(2023)

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Abstract
BACKGROUND:Livestock-dependent communities in Africa's drylands disproportionately experience acute malnutrition, especially during drought seasons. We detail the design and implementation of the Livestock for Health (L4H) study aimed at determining the effect of providing livestock feed and nutritional counselling to prevent seasonal spikes of acute malnutrition.METHODS:The L4H study employed a 3-arm cluster randomized controlled trial to compare households in pastoralist settings in northern Kenya receiving livestock feeds during critical dry periods, with or without nutritional counseling, with control households. Over 4 dry seasons, 2019 to 2021, the study collected data on household milk production, consumption patterns, mothers'/children's nutritional status, household socioeconomic status, herd dynamics, and human and animal health status every 6 weeks.RESULTS:L4H recruited 1734 households, with 639, 585, and 510 households assigned to intervention arms 1 and 2 and control arm 3, respectively. From these households, 1734 women and 1748 children younger than 3 years were recruited. In total, 19 419 household visits were completed, obtaining anthropometric measures 9 times on average for each child and mother. Eighty-one households (5%) were lost from the study due to the mother's death, child's death, migration, and withdrawal for other reasons.DISCUSSION:L4H's success in a challenging environment was possible due to strong community engagement, formative studies to inform trial design, collaboration with local authorities, and effective interdisciplinary collaboration. Subsequent manuscripts will report the study findings.TRIAL REGISTRATION:The study was registered October 29, 2020, and is online at ClinicalTrials.gov (ID: NCT04608656).
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