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Multi-Sectoral Nutrition Focus on Dietary Diversity

Promoting and enabling diverse diets among children is key to stopping the vicious circle of malnutrition and disease.

Malnutrition has devastating consequences for many of the world's poor—especially children, who do not get enough or the right mix of food for optimal physical and cognitive development.

SPRING's Approach

Because diets depend on many different factors, SPRING takes a multi-sectoral approach to improve dietary diversity during the first 1,000 days—from conception to age 2. In addition, by focusing on food systems, our programs understand and influence the decisions that families make about producing, purchasing, and consuming foods.

But we don't stop at the household. SPRING also helps to make agricultural value chains more nutrition-sensitive, ensuring the availability of diverse foods in local markets and enabling families to make healthy choices.

While our programs around the world are evidence-based, we're also committed to experimenting with new, innovative approaches. Our collaboration with local partners is critical to identify, test, and scale up new approaches to improve nutrition.

Icon for produceDiverse Production

Without high-quality, diverse foods to grow or buy, families are unable to diversify their diets and improve their nutrition. SPRING identifies the gaps in the food and agriculture market and supports partners in filling them to improve dietary diversity.

Sierra Leone

Photo of a child eating on the ground.

After analyzing the agriculture value chain, we encouraged greater production of fish and pumpkins, increasing the availability of foods rich in protein and vitamin A.

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Ghana

Photo of a child with tamarind.

Our formative research showed that households could increase protein and vitamin-A intake by producing and consuming more orange-fleshed sweet potatoes, aflatoxin-free groundnuts, vitamin-A rich maize and liver. 

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Uganda

Photo of a mother and child being treated on a mat by a woman in a USAID shirt.

Strengthening local capacity to fortify essential foods, like wheat, maize, and oils substantially improved dietary diversity, in partnership with the national government and the private sector.

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Icon for produceDiverse Purchases

Having healthy, nutritious food available is just the first step; people must then choose to purchase it. This requires changing behaviors and mindsets—a skill SPRING builds together with local partners.

Bangladesh

Photo of a man, woman and child in an orchard.

When we learned that men do most of the food shopping for their families, we recommended that they join our Farmer Nutrition Schools, which had been successful in helping women learn how and why to modify their food production and child feeding behaviors.

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Guatemala

Photo of a woman selling produce at a market.

Our formative research revealed several opportunities to improve food purchasing patterns among rural households—from engaging more grandmothers to developing creative communication campaigns.

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Senegal

Photo of a woman holding a bag of grain.

Many households grow cereals, which alone are not enough for a diverse diet. We worked with cereal producer organizations and agricultural extension workers to encourage households to sell a portion of their cereals and then invest the income in more nutrient-rich foods.

Icon for consumeDiverse Consumption

What people eat is influenced by their sociocultural and physical environment. One of the best ways to encourage households to eat more diverse foods is by appealing to them on personal and emotional levels. Community videos and cookbooks are some ways that SPRING inspires people to embrace more diverse diets for themselves and their families.

Niger

Photo of a woman feeding an infant.

We introduced community videos featuring people from the target community overcoming barriers to good nutrition that had been uncovered during formative research. When audiences saw one video in which their neighbors mixed in dried, powdered fish and dried moringa to fortify their baby’s food, they expressed strong motivation to use these practices as well.

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Kyrgyz Republic

Photo of a family working with vegetables.

Together with local nutritionists, we produced a cookbook to encourage greater dietary diversity by suggesting new ways to use readily available healthy ingredients in regional cuisines. The cookbook was accompanied by a guide on food safety and storage over the winter when availability is limited.

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Burkina Faso

Photo of several people meeting around a table.

Listening to the radio is a widespread pastime and source of information, so we partnered with local radio stations to produce engaging programming on why and how to diversify diets for babies and for pregnant and lactating women.

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Improving Dietary Diversity in Bangladesh

SPRING pioneered the Farmer Nutrition School approach to reach mothers and children in the first 1,000 days in 40 upazilas of Barisal and Khulna Divisions along the coast of southern Bangladesh. In USAID Feed the Future zones of influence, women in the two poorest wealth quintiles were invited to enroll in the program. These women learned about improved poultry rearing and aquaculture practices as well as household gardening with a wider variety of vegetables. Participants also learned about the importance of essential nutrition and hygiene actions. After nine months of participating in the FNS, participants experienced an increase in the mean number of chickens owned by more than two, and the type of fish farmed increased by one. SPRING also observed that the mean number of vegetable varieties increased by more than two. As a result, dietary diversity increased as well—

Infants

Overall percentages of food groups consumed by babies age 6–11 months in Phase 1(2015) and Phase 2 (2016), from highest percentage increase to lowest percentage increase.*

Graphic showing dietary patterns for infants

*SPRING Bangladesh Farmer Nutrition School Cohort Study, January 2017.

The percentage of each of 7 food groups consumed by 6-11 month-old babies increased significantly with the greatest increases seen in legumes and nuts, vitamin-A rich vegetables, and fruits and eggs. Consumption of flesh foods increased by 22 percentage points.

Percentage of infants age 6–11 months consuming 4 or more food groups in Phase 1 and Phase 2*

Graphic showing percentage of infants age 6–11 months consuming 4 or more food groups in Phase 1 and Phase 2

*Four of seven possible food groups (legumes and nuts; vitamin-A-rich fruits and vegetables; eggs; other fruits and vegetables; flesh foods; grains, roots, and tubers; and diary products). Bangladesh Farmer Nutrition School Cohort Study, January 2017.

In phase I of the FNS program, 23% of infants 6-11 months consumed 4+ food groups (WHO recommended minimum dietary diversity). By the end of phase II, after nine months of participating in FNS, mothers were feeding 79% of infants 4+ food groups.

Mothers

Average number of food groups women consumed in 24 hours*

Graphic showing average number of food groups women consumed in 24 hours

Dietary diversity of mothers of children less than 2 years old also improved. At the start, mothers consumed a mean number of 3.9 food groups (of 9 possible groups). After nine months, mothers consumed a mean number of 6 food groups.

*Minimum food diversity is when 5+ food groups are consumed.

Percentage of mothers consuming 5 or more food groups in Phase 1 and Phase 2*

Graphic showing percentage of mothers consuming 5 or more food groups in Phase 1 and Phase 2

In phase I of the FNS program, 29% of mothers consumed 5+ food groups. This rate increased to 83% by the end of phase II.

*5 of 9 possible food groups (starches; dairy products; legumes; dark green leafy vegetables; vitamin-A-rich fruits and vegetables; other fruits and vegetables; flesh foods; eggs; and organ meats). Source: SPRING Bangladesh Farmer Nutrition School Cohort Study, January 2017.

Looking Forward

Food systems and culture are complex and ever changing, so we’re SPRINGing forward with new ideas and approaches to improve dietary diversity, including:

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Scaling up comprehensive approaches based on evidence from assessments of food systems and dietary practices.

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Developing a holistic social and behavior change (SBC) strategy that targets the entire family and community—not just mothers and farmers, but also adolescent girls, religious leaders, and other influential community figures.

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Conducting barrier analyses to examine specific beliefs and choices for dietary practices throughout the value chain.

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Evaluating the impact of dietary diversity on nutritional status. We need to better understand and measure the pathway between a diverse diet and good nutrition.

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Incorporating systems thinking that considers the big picture, accounting for policy and governance throughout program design, implementation, and evaluation.

Relevant Resources