8 research outputs found
Predictors of Program Participation in a Nutrition-Sensitive Agroecological Intervention in Singida, Tanzania
This research article was published in the Current Developments in Nutrition Volume 4, SUPPLEMENT 2, June 2020Objectives
Nutrition-sensitive agricultural interventions are theorized to improve childâs diet through asset provision and program participation. Although some programs measure participation, predictors of participation are understudied. We therefore investigated predictors of menâs and womenâs program participation in Singida Nutrition and Agroecology Project (SNAP-Tz; NCT02761876).
Methods
In SNAP-Tz, âmentor farmersâ led their peers (smallholder farmers with children < 1 year at baseline) in learning about agroecology, nutrition, and gender equity through meetings and household visits. At baseline, we collected data on demographics, Household Food Insecurity Access Scale (0â27), menâs involvement in 7 household tasks (0â7), and Abbreviated Womenâs Empowerment in Agriculture Index (AWEAI). Participating men (n = 262) and women (n = 283) were asked to recall their program participation biannually. Predictors of high participation, defined as attendance in â„60% participant meetings and household visits, were identified using multiple logistic regressions, controlling for clustering at the village level.
Results
Only 59% and 37% of women and men, respectively, had high participation. Womenâs high participation was associated with their spouseâs participation (OR = 4.23, P < 0.01), greater food insecurity (OR = 1.03, P = 0.03), years of education (OR = 1.13, P = 0.02), and being empowered (OR = 5.88, P < 0.01). Menâs high participation was associated with their spouseâs participation (OR = 4.22, P < 0.01), greater food insecurity (OR = 2.23, P = 0.01), involvement in household tasks (OR = 1.25, P = 0.04), and age (OR = 1.03, P < 0.01).
Conclusions
Associations between an individualâs and their spouseâs participation indicate the importance of spousal dynamics. The association between participation and baseline gender equity (i.e., womenâs empowerment, menâs involvement in household tasks) highlights the challenges of gender programming in nutrition-sensitive interventions. Analysis of program participation was simple and revealed valuable lessons for program implementation and design; more programs should therefore analyze participation
A Participatory Agroecological Intervention Reduces Womenâs Risk of Probable Depression Through Improvements in Food Security in Singida, Tanzania
This research article was published in the Current Developments in Nutrition Volume 4, Supplement 2, June 2020In 2015, depressive disorders led to over 50 million disability-adjusted life years lost globally, with more than 80% occurring in low- and middle-income countries. Depressive disorders are also risk factors of a number of adverse maternal and child health outcomes. To our knowledge, the Singida Nutrition and Agroecology Project (SNAP-Tz), is the first nutrition-sensitive agriculture (NSA) intervention identified to improve womenâs probable depression (2020). Food security has been posited to play an important role in the relationship between NSA interventions and depression, yet causal factors have not yet been analyzed quantitatively. Therefore, we investigated food securityâs mediating role on this impact
Food security mediates the decrease in women's depressive symptoms in a participatory nutrition-sensitive agroecology intervention in rural Tanzania.
This research article published by Cambridge University Press, 2021Objective:
To investigate if food security mediated the impact of a nutrition-sensitive agroecology intervention on womenâs depressive symptoms.
Design:
We used annual longitudinal data (4 time points) from a cluster-randomized effectiveness trial of a participatory nutrition-sensitive agroecology intervention, the Singida Nutrition and Agroecology Project (SNAP-Tz). Structural equation modelling estimation of total, natural direct, and natural indirect effects was used to investigate food securityâs role in the interventionâs impact on womenâs risk of probable depression (CES-D > 17) across three years.
Setting:
Rural Singida, Tanzania.
Participants:
548 food insecure, married, smallholder women farmers with children < 1-year-old at baseline.
Results:
At baseline, one third of the women in each group had probable depression (Control: 32.0%, Intervention: 31.9%, p difference=0.97). The intervention lowered odds of probable depression by 43% (OR=0.57, 95% CI: 0.43-0.70). Differences in food insecurity explained approximately 10 percentage points of the effects of the intervention on odds of probable depression (OR = 0.90, 95% CI: 0.83-0.95).
Conclusions:
This is the first evidence of the strong, positive effect that lowering food insecurity has on reducing womenâs depressive symptoms. Nutrition-sensitive agricultural interventions can have broader impacts than previously demonstrated, i.e., improvements in mental health, and changes in food security play an important causal role in this pathway. As such, these data suggest participatory nutrition-sensitive agroecology interventions have the potential to be an accessible method of improving womenâs wellbeing in farming communities
Sustainability of Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Services under Community Management Approach: The case of six villages in Tanzania
Abstract Community management of the rural water supply and sanitation services is considered as one of the options for achieving sustainability of the water services. International communities and donors are steering this concept. National water policy in Tanzania puts more emphasis on community participation and management of water and sanitation (WATSAN) schemes. This study on the sustainability of the rural water supply and sanitation services focused on community management and participation as one strategy, which could contribute to the sustainability of WATSAN provision. A study was conducted in six water schemes in six villages in Tanzania, four of the villages had water schemes in operation and two schemes were under construction. Data was collected from water users, water management committees and water providers. A structured questionnaire was administered to 92 water users in four water schemes in operation, focus group discussion was conducted to water management committees in six water schemes and three water providers responded to the questionnaire. Given changes and increasing diversity in the management of rural WATSAN schemes (village water committees, board of directors and public private partnership), it is apparent that community management of rural water schemes without support is not an ideal solution for achieving sustainability. It was also affirmed that to achieve a real community participation in the project is difficult. Village government leaders and water management committees were mainly involved during the planning phase and local communities during implementation. Interference by the politicians, village government leaders and inability of the water schemes to recover costs were the main problems facing water schemes. The consequence was poor performance and failure of some schemes to deliver the services. Generally, the findings lead to a subjective inference that community management of rural water schemes alone is not an ideal solution for attaining sustainability. Community management of rural WATSAN schemes is a good idea if implemented where there is demand-driven community involvement right from the beginning of the projects. Nevertheless, with the right capacity building and continuous support, community management of the rural WATSAN schemes can deliver reliable and sustainable water and sanitation services
Production Diversity Is Not Associated with Women's Dietary Diversity After Controlling for Wealth and Participation in an Agriculture Intervention in Tanzania (P10-031-19)
This research article was published in the Current Developments in Nutrition Volume 3, SUPPLEMENT 1, June 2019Objectives
Farm production diversity has long thought to be a primary driver of dietary diversity. Few studies have explored the drivers of dietary diversity among women, who are often vulnerable to sub-optimal diets. We therefore investigated how production diversity affects womenâs dietary diversity in smallholder farming communities in rural Tanzania. Specifically, we hypothesized that women in households with greater farm production diversity would have higher dietary diversity.
Methods
Female farmers (n = 462) were surveyed on agricultural practices in 2018 and their diet in the subsequent harvest season as a part of the Singida Nutrition and Agroecology Project (SNAP-Tz). SNAP-Tz is a cluster randomized effectiveness trial of a participatory agroecology and nutrition intervention. We estimated the impact of production diversity (crop species richness, range: 1â10) on womenâs dietary diversity (Minimum Dietary Diversity for Women, range: 1â10) using linear regression analysis with Stata15, controlling for geographic clustering and other known covariates of womenâs dietary diversity.
Results
Farm production diversity was positively associated with womenâs dietary diversity after controlling for household size, age, and womenâs occupation (b = 0.15, P < 0.01). However, this association was not significant (b = 0.068, P = 0.18) after additionally controlling for household wealth and participation in the intervention.
Conclusions
Contrary to our hypothesis, women living in households with higher production diversity did not have more diverse diets when controlling for other covariates of dietary diversity, i.e., household wealth and participation in the participatory agroecology intervention. Modifiable determinants of womenâs dietary diversity are an important area for future exploration. Comparing and contrasting the role of production diversity here to that in other settings will be fruitful
Production Diversity, Men's Help with Household Tasks, & Lower Women's Depression Mediate Impact of an Agriculture Intervention on Child's Dietary Diversity in Tanzania (FS01-06-19)
This research article was published by Elsevier in 2019Production diversity and womenâs empowerment are two ways by which nutrition-sensitive agriculture interventions are thought to improve childrenâs diet, but, few empirical studies have tested these pathways. We therefore investigated the impact of the Singida Nutrition and Agroecology Project (SNAP-Tz; NCT02761876) on childâs dietary diversity, as well as the mediating role of production diversity and womenâs empowerment on that relationship
A Mixed Methods Exploration of the Role of Participation in a Nutrition-Sensitive Agroecology Intervention in Rural Tanzania
This research article was published in the Current Developments in Nutrition Volume 7, Issue 6, June 2023Background: Participation is key to the successful implementation of nutrition-related interventions, but it has been relatively overlooked.
Objective: We sought to describe participation intensity among smallholder farmers in a randomized nutrition-sensitive agroecology study
in rural Tanzania. We explored the association between baseline characteristics and overall participation intensity (quantitatively at the
individual level and qualitatively at the group level), the association of participation intensity with 2 process indicators, and the association
between participation intensity and key study outcomes.
Methods: Data came from 7 rounds of surveys with 295 women and 267 men across 29 months and 2 rounds of semi-structured interviews
with the 20 âmentor farmersâ who delivered the intervention. Participation intensity was based on the number of months of attendance at
village-level project meetings or household visits (range: 0â29). Multivariable models of participation were built.
Results: Women and men participated for 17.5 7.2 and 13.6 8.3 months, respectively. Participation intensity followed 1 latent tra-
jectory: initially low, with a sharp increase after month 7, and plateaued after the first year. At baseline, higher participation intensity was
associated with older age, higher education, level of womenâs empowerment, being in the middle quintile of wealth, and qualitatively,
village residence. Higher participation intensity was associated with 2 process indicators â better recall of topics discussed during meetings
and greater knowledge about key agroecological methods. High participation intensity was positively associated with increased use of
sustainable agricultural practices among all participants, and among women, with husbandâs involvement in household tasks and childâs
dietary diversity score.
Conclusions: Participation intensity covaried with key study outcomes, suggesting the value of increased attention to implementation in
nutrition-related programs for providing insights into drivers of impact. We hope that investigations of participation, including participation
intensity, will become more widespread so that intervention impacts, or lack thereof, can be better understood
Household food insecurity and gender inequity is associated with high prevalence of maternal depression amongst female farmers with young children in rural Tanzania
This research article was published by The Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology in2018There is growing recognition of the importance of maternal mental health for the well-being of both mothers and children. In addition to being of importance to public health concern on its own right, maternal depression could impede women's capacity to provide quality care to their children. However, the covariates of maternal depression, especially in low-resource settings, are not well-understood. In particular, the role of gender equity in maternal depression needs further investigation. Therefore, we sought to understand covariates associated with maternal depression in a rural farming community in Tanzania. We hypothesized that greater food insecurity and gender inequity in a household would be positively correlated with maternal depression.
The Singida Nutrition and Agroecology Project (SNAP-Tz) is a participatory agroecology and nutrition intervention with rural farmers with children <1 y in Singida, Tanzania. As part of the baseline assessment in February 2016, women from the 587 participating households were asked about a range of socio-demographic, agricultural, health, and nutrition topics. The Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D, range: 0â65) was used to measure maternal depression. The Household Food Insecurity Access Scale (HFIAS, range: 0â27) was used to measure household food insecurity. Gender equity was indicated by a summed score of husband's help with household chores (range: 0â7), women's (dis)satisfaction with leisure time, and women's experience with domestic violence. Social support was measured using the Perceived Social Support scale (PSS, range:0â40). Multivariate linear regression models of depression were then built using backwards stepwise elimination and include village fixed effects. Standard error estimates considered clustering at the village level.
CESD scores indicated probable depression (CES-Dâ„17) among 69.2% of women. Probable major depression (CES-Dâ„26) was indicated for 42.5% women. The mean HFIAS of 14.0 (sd: 7.9) suggested that food insecurity was also very common. In multivariate models of depression, food insecurity score was positively and strongly correlated with maternal depression score (ÎČ=0.62, p=0.000). Having experienced domestic violence was positively associated with increased maternal depression score (ÎČ=4.29, p=0.004). Greater help from husband and satisfaction with amount of leisure time were negatively correlated with maternal depression score (ÎČ=â0.65, p=0.011 and ÎČ=â3.00, p=0.000, respectively).
In sum, the prevalence of maternal depression is very high in Singida, Tanzania. While some covariates were not modifiable, several important ones were, including food insecurity, unbalanced household division of task, and domestic violence. Causality should be further explored, but these data suggest important and novel domains in which to intervene to improve maternal mental health