Treating Moderate Malnutrition in 6-24 Months Old Children
Treating Moderate Malnutrition in 6-24 Months Old Children
NCT ID: NCT01115647 Phase: NA Status: COMPLETED Enrollment: 2088 Completion: 2011-11
Conditions
Moderate Acute Malnutrition
Interventions
Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Food (RUTF), CBS++, CCC
Summary
Child malnutrition is intimately associated to poverty and may be due to sub-optimal feeding behaviours, food insecurity at household level, or a combination of both. Acute malnutrition is a major contributor to under-5 mortality and morbidity in developing countries. While clinical guidelines for severe acute malnutrition (SAM) have been available for a decade, research on the management of moderate acute malnutrition (MAM) has lagged behind. Nonetheless, MAM is much more incident than SAM, it increases mortality risk by itself and requires special nutritional treatment. This study is thus meant to address this major gap, by testing the relative feasibility, effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of three innovative strategies for treating children with MAM aged 6-24 months : a locally produced Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Food (RUTF), a corn/soy blended flour (CSB++)provided by the World Food Program, and a specific and context-appropriate child-centred counselling.
The evaluation will be carried out as a cluster-randomized trial in the Houndé district, Burkina Faso, where 18 rural health centres will be randomly allocated to RUSF or CSB or CCC for treating MAM.
Primary Outcome
Recovery rate