Samaki Salama: Securing Small-scale Fisheries in Kenya for Healthy Nutrition and Ecosystems
Social marketing
+ social marketing + gear modification
Troubles de la croissance+3
+ Maladies nutritionnelles et métaboliques
+ Troubles de la Nutrition
Étude de prévention
Résumé
Date de début de l'étude : 9 juillet 2021
Date à laquelle le premier participant a commencé l'étude.One in five young children globally suffer the consequences of stunted growth and development, while millions experience deficiencies in zinc, iron, iodine, vitamins A and B12, nutrients found bioavailable in fish foods. Small-scale fisheries (SSF) have the potential to generate wealth and augment fish consumption while being environmentally sustainable if appropriate systems are in place. However, those engaged in SSF are often marginalized by large industrial fisheries and other factors. Coastal communities in Kenya are dominated by SSF and are among the poorest and most malnourished globally. To address these critical issues, investigators aim to test the effectiveness of a bundled intervention to address malnutrition and its intersections with nutrition security and fisheries sustainability. A matched intervention/control study will be conducted to examine the multifaceted Samaki Salama ("fish security" in Kiswahili) intervention in Kilifi, Kenya. The matched communities will be divided into three groups: (1) control; (2) multi-tiered nutrition social marketing intervention to fishers, mothers, and health workers; (3) multi-tiered nutrition social marketing intervention plus fisher gear modification and training. A total of 8 communities will be matched based on based on location (rural), livelihoods and child nutritional status into control (n=4) and intervention (n=4) groups. Participants from 400 small-scale fisher households will be recruited and enrolled by Kenyan partners from Egerton University and Pwani University using the eligibility criteria. Group 1 (n=200 households) will be the control group. Group 2 (n=100 households) will receive a multi-tiered nutrition social marketing intervention focused on promoting dietary diversity and fish food consumption specifically among infants, young children and women of reproductive age. The nutrition intervention will target fishers, mother and health workers and involve monthly communications of key nutrition messages across a range of platforms including mobile phone messaging through WhatsApp or SMS, social media, radio, t-shirts, stickers, flyers, cooking classes, meetings of mother's groups and other convening opportunities. Group 3 (n=100 households) will receive a bundled intervention of the multi-tiered nutrition social marketing intervention plus fisher gear modification and training. Fishers from Group 3 will receive modified fishing gear (traps) designed specifically to improve harvest efficiency and promote sustainable fish populations. Training on modified gear use will be administered through local fishing cooperatives. Investigators hypothesize that the combined impact of the targeted social marketing and fisher trap interventions will improve the diet, health and nutritional status of children as well increase fisheries yield and fisher's earnings in intervention communities. Specific hypotheses of primary and secondary outcomes are as follows: Hypotheses: primary outcomes * The children in the intervention groups (combined groups 2 and 3) with have increased height-for-age Z score (HAZ) by 0.20 compared to children in the control (group 1). * The children in the intervention groups (combined groups 2 and 3) with have increased weight-for-age Z score (WAZ) by 0.10 compared to children in the control (group 1). * The children in the intervention groups (combined groups 2 and 3) with have increased fish food intakes by 100 g compared to children in the control (group 1). * Fishers in the group 3 will have significantly increased fisheries yields of mature fish compared to fishers in the control (group 1). Hypotheses: secondary outcomes * The children in the intervention groups (combined 2 and 3) with have increased dietary diversity by 1.2 compared to children in the control (group 1). * The children in the intervention groups (combined 2 and 3) with have reduced diarrheal morbidity by 5 percentage points compared to children in the control (group 1). * Fishers in group 3 will have significantly increased earnings compared to fishers in the control (group 1).
Protocole
Cette section fournit des détails sur le plan de l'étude, y compris la manière dont l'étude est conçue et ce qu'elle évalue.1200 participants à inclure
Nombre total de participants que l'essai clinique vise à recruter.Prévention
Éligibilité
Les chercheurs recherchent des patients correspondant à une certaine description appelée critères d'éligibilité : état de santé général ou traitements antérieurs du patient.Tout sexe
Le sexe biologique des participants éligibles à s'inscrire.De 6 à 60 mois
Tranche d'âge des participants éligibles à participer.Volontaires sains autorisés
Indique si les individus en bonne santé et ne présentant pas la condition étudiée peuvent participer.Conditions
Pathologie
Critères
Plan de l'étude
Découvrez tous les traitements administrés dans cette étude, leur description détaillée et ce qu'ils impliquent.2 groupes d'intervention sont désignés dans cette étude
Cette étude ne comporte pas de groupe placebo.
Groupes de traitement
Groupe I
ExpérimentalGroupe II
ExpérimentalObjectifs de l'étude
Objectifs principaux
Objectifs secondaires
Centres d'étude
Ce sont les hôpitaux, cliniques ou centres de recherche où l'essai est conduit. Vous pouvez trouver le site le plus proche de vous ainsi que son statut.Cette étude comporte 1 site