Effects of Preventive Nutrition Interventions among Adolescents on Health and Nutritional Status in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Objective
2.2. Type of Studies and Participants
- Nutrition education and counseling: (refers to education aimed at promoting a healthy diet by increasing the diversity and amount of foods consumed through various platforms including schools, communities, peer-based networks, and computer- and web-based education).
- Micronutrient supplementation (refers to the provision of individual or mixture of nutrients separately from the diet in form of injections, tablets, capsules, syrups/liquids, or powders) and fortification (refers to the process in which micronutrients are added to processed foods).
- Macronutrient supplementation (refers to supplementary feeding, balanced energy and protein supplementation, and lipid-based nutrition supplementation (LNS)).
2.3. Type of Outcomes
2.4. Search Methods
2.5. Data Collection and Analysis
- Duration or intensity of intervention (e.g., short versus long term, one-off versus multiple sessions).
- Individual context versus group context (for nutrition education and counseling only, i.e., children receiving the intervention individually versus those in groups)
- Study setting: school, community, clinic, etc.
- Sex: male and female
- Population (e.g., urban population versus rural population; resource-poor versus resource-rich population)
- We also attempted to conduct subgroup analysis based on the WHO health system building blocks factors (where data was available).
2.6. Quality Assessment
3. Results
3.1. Results of the Search
3.2. Description of Included Studies
3.3. Contextual Factors Based on WHO Health System Building Blocks
3.4. Risk of Bias
3.5. Effects of Intervention
3.5.1. Comparison 1: Nutrition Education and Counseling
3.5.2. Comparison 2: Micronutrient Supplementation and Fortification (Any Micronutrient Alone or in Combination)
3.5.3. Comparison 3: Macronutrient Supplementation
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Search Strategy
PubMed Search Strategy: (Titles/Abstracts and Text Words) | ((“Adolescent” [Mesh]) OR (“Child” [Mesh]) OR (Adolescent* OR Adolescence)OR (Teen* OR (Youth*) OR (Puberty) OR (juvenil*)) AND ((“Micronutrients” [Mesh]) OR (“Dietary Supplements” [Mesh]) OR (“Food, Fortified” [Mesh]) OR (“Vitamins” [Mesh]) OR (“Minerals” [Mesh] OR “Trace Elements” [Mesh]) OR (“Ferric compounds” [Mesh] OR “Ferrous Compounds” [Mesh]) OR (Iron* OR Ferric OR Ferrous) OR (“Diet Supplement*” OR “Dietary Supplement*” OR Biofortification) OR (“Folic Acid” [Mesh]) OR (Folic* OR Folate* OR Folvite* OR Folacin*) OR (“Zinc” [Mesh] OR “Zinc Sulfate” [Mesh]) OR (“Calcium” [Mesh]) OR (Calcium) OR (“Vitamin D” [Mesh]) OR (vitamin d) OR (“Vitamin A” [Mesh]) OR (“Vitamin A”) OR (“Ascorbic Acid” [Mesh]) OR (“Vitamin C”) OR (Ascorb* OR “ascorbic acid”) OR (Vitamin* OR multivitamin* OR multi-vitamin* OR MMN OR micro-nutrient* OR mineral* OR multimineral* OR multi-mineral OR multinutrient* OR “multiple micronutrient*” OR “food environment” OR advertisement* OR “mass media” OR “supplementary feeding” OR “energy supplement*” OR “protein supplement*” OR “lipid based nutrition” OR LNS)) AND ((“Adolescent Development” [Mesh]) OR (“Adolescent Growth”) OR (“Serum Haemoglobin” OR “Serum micronutrient*” OR “Anthropometric measurement*”)) |
EBSCO CINAHL Plus: | ((“Adolescent” [Mesh]) OR (Adolescent* OR Adolescence) OR (Teen* OR Teenager*) OR (Youth*) OR (Puberty) OR (juvenile)) AND ((“Micronutrients” [Mesh]) OR (“Dietary Supplements” [Mesh]) OR (“Food, Fortified” [Mesh]) OR (“Vitamins” [Mesh]) OR (“Minerals” [Mesh] OR “Trace Elements” [Mesh]) OR (“Ferric compounds” [Mesh] OR “Ferrous Compounds” [Mesh]) OR (Iron* OR Ferric OR Ferrous) OR (“Diet Supplement*” OR “Dietary Supplement*” OR Biofortification) OR (“Folic Acid” [Mesh]) OR (Folic* OR Folate* OR Folvite* OR Folacin*) OR (“Zinc” [Mesh] OR “Zinc Sulfate” [Mesh]) OR (“Calcium” [Mesh]) OR (Calcium) OR (“Vitamin D” [Mesh]) OR (vitamin d) OR (“Vitamin A” [Mesh]) OR (“Vitamin A”) OR (“Ascorbic Acid” [Mesh]) OR (“Vitamin C”) OR (Ascorb* OR “ascorbic acid”) OR (Vitamin* OR multivitamin* OR multi-vitamin* OR MMN OR micro-nutrient* OR mineral* OR multimineral* OR multi-mineral OR multinutrient* OR “multiple micronutrient*” OR “food environment” OR advertisement* OR “mass media” OR “supplementary feeding” OR “energy supplement*” OR “protein supplement*” OR “lipid based nutrition” OR LNS)) AND ((“Adolescent Development” [Mesh]) OR (“Adolescent Growth”) OR (“Serum Haemoglobin” OR “Serum micronutrient*” OR “Anthropometric measurement*”)) |
Cochrane Library: | ((“Adolescent” [Mesh]) OR (“Child” [Mesh]) OR (Adolescent* OR Adolescence) OR (Teen* OR (Youth*) OR (Puberty) OR (juvenil*)) AND ((“Micronutrients” [Mesh]) OR (“Dietary Supplements” [Mesh]) OR (“Food, Fortified”[Mesh]) OR (“Vitamins” [Mesh]) OR (“Minerals” [Mesh] OR “Trace Elements” [Mesh]) OR (“Ferric compounds” [Mesh] OR “Ferrous Compounds” [Mesh]) OR (Iron* OR Ferric OR Ferrous) OR (“Diet Supplement*” OR “Dietary Supplement*” OR Biofortification) OR (“Folic Acid” [Mesh]) OR (Folic* OR Folate* OR Folvite* OR Folacin*) OR (“Zinc” [Mesh] OR “Zinc Sulfate” [Mesh]) OR (“Calcium” [Mesh]) OR (Calcium) OR (“Vitamin D” [Mesh]) OR (vitamin d) OR (“Vitamin A” [Mesh]) OR (“Vitamin A”) OR (“Ascorbic Acid” [Mesh]) OR (“Vitamin C”) OR (Ascorb* OR “ascorbic acid”) OR (Vitamin* OR multivitamin* OR multi-vitamin* OR MMN OR micro-nutrient* OR mineral* OR multimineral* OR multi-mineral OR multinutrient* OR “multiple micronutrient*” OR “food environment” OR advertisement* OR “mass media” OR “supplementary feeding” OR “energy supplement*” OR “protein supplement*” OR “lipid based nutrition” OR LNS)) AND ((“Adolescent Development” [Mesh]) OR (“Adolescent Growth”) OR (“Serum Haemoglobin” OR “Serum micronutrient*” OR “Anthropometric measurement*”)) |
Appendix B. Reasons for Exclusion
Study | Reason for Exclusion |
Abrams, 2005 [43] | Intervention given was prebiotic (inulin-type fructans) |
Ahmed, 2005 [44] | Participants were anemic at baseline and the intervention was therapeutic |
Ahmed, 2010 [45] | Participants were anemic at baseline and the intervention was therapeutic |
Angeles-Agdeppa, 1997 [46] | Participants were asymptomatic anemic individuals and the intervention was therapeutic |
Beasley, 2000 [47] | Participants were infected with schistosomiasis; infection was believed to affect the outcome, and IFA was taken as therapeutic intervention |
Castillo-Durán, 2001 [47] | The study was from a non-LMIC country |
Chan, 2006 [48] | The study was carried out in a non-LMIC country |
Damsgaard, 2012 [49] | Only slightly overweight individuals were enrolled |
de Oliveira, 2009 [50] | The study was from a non-LMIC country |
Deshmukh, 2008 [51] | This study did not have an appropriate control group |
Diogenes, 2013 [52] | The study was from a non-LMIC country |
Dongre, 2011 [53] | This study did not have an appropriate control group |
Eftekhari, 2006 [54] | Participants were iron-deficient at baseline and the intervention was therapeutic |
Friis, 1997 [55] | 93% of the participants were infected by schistosomiasis; infection was believed to affect the outcome |
Ganmaa, 2017 [56] | Participants were asymptomatic vitamin D-deficient individuals according to the inclusion criteria; intervention was used as therapeutic intervention |
Ilich-Ernst, 1998 [57] | The study was carried out in a non-LMIC country |
Kianfer, 2000 [58] | The intervention was therapeutic |
Kotecha, 2009 [59] | The study did not have an appropriate control group |
Lambert, 2009 [60] | The study was carried out in a non-LMIC country |
Ma, 2014 [61] | The study did not have an appropriate control group |
Manger, 2008 [62] | The study population included children and adolescents, and the study author suggested that the data for the adolescent subgroup were too small |
Mann, 2002 [63] | Participants were asymptomatic anemic individuals; grouping was done based on energy intakes |
McKenna, 1997 [64] | The study was carried out in a non-LMIC country |
Mwaniki, 2002 [65] | The intervention was therapeutic |
Pilz, 2017 [66] | The methods described inclusion criteria of age 18–45 years but results showed that the age of participants was between 22 and 29 years; participants were not adolescents |
Prentice, 2005 [67] | The study was carried out in a non-LMIC country |
Dibba, 2000 [68] | The study population included children and adolescents; the corresponding authors were contacted for the adolescent subgroup data; however, we did not receive any response |
Rerksuppaphol, 2016 [69] | The study population included children and adolescents; the corresponding authors were contacted for the adolescent subgroup data; however, we did not receive any response |
Rousham, 2013 [70] | Intervention was used as therapeutic intervention |
Sarma, 2006 [71] | The study population included children and adolescents; the corresponding authors were contacted for the adolescent subgroup data; however, we did not receive any response |
Schou, 2003 [72] | The study was carried out in a non-LMIC country |
Shah, 2002 [73] | Intervention was used as therapeutic intervention |
Silk, 2015 [74] | The study was carried out in a non-LMIC country |
Sunawang, 2009 [75] | The participants were not adolescents |
Tee, 1999 [76] | Participants were asymptomatic anemic individuals; intervention was used as a therapeutic agent in this study |
Viljakainen, 2006 [77] | The study was carried out in a non-LMIC country |
White, 2015 [78] | The study was carried out in a non-LMIC country |
Yusoff, 2012 [79] | The study was from a non-LMIC country |
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Study | Study Design | Setting | Participants | Intervention/Control | Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Agarwal, 2003 [27] | Cluster randomized trial | Four government senior secondary schools, Delhi, India | 2088 adolescent girls | 100 mg elemental iron and 500 μg folic acid in the form of oral tablets was provided for 100 days Group 1: Daily treatment (N = 702) Group 2: Weekly treatment: (N = 695) Control: Control group did not receive any tablets during the intervention period (N = 691) | Hemoglobin, plasma ferritin, anemia |
Chiplonkar, 2012 [28] | Individually randomized trial | A secondary girl’s school in Pune City, Maharashtra, India | 180 adolescent girls | Intervention group 1 (N = 60) Supplement was provided in the form of six different snacks to each girl with one snack (average amount 100 g/serving) per day for 6 school days in a week. The average zinc content of the food supplements was 2.2 ± 0.4 mg/serving Intervention group 2 (N = 59) The ayurvedic zinc tablet containing 20 mg of jasad bhasma, equivalent to 16.6 mg of elemental zinc, was given to each girl every day for 6 school days/week under the guidance of an ayurvedic doctor Control (N = 53) No supplement was given to the control group | Dietary intake, hemoglobin, plasma zinc, plasma beta-carotene, plasma retinol, plasma vitamin C |
Februhartanty, 2002 [29] | Individually randomized trial | Junior high schools in Kupang, East Nusa Tenggara, in the eastern part of Indonesia | 150 female adolescents | The iron tablet used in this study contained 60 mg elemental iron and 0.25 mg folic acid in the form of 200 mg ferrous sulfate Group 1: Weekly iron tablets (N = 50). Group 2: Iron tablet for four consecutive days during their menstruation cycle (N = 50) Control: Placebo tablet (N = 50) | Hemoglobin, ferritin level |
Goyle, 2012 [30,37] | Individually randomized trial | Government school near university of Rajasthan, Jaipur, India | 107 adolescent girls | Intervention group (N = 53): 100 g of biscuits fortified with one RDA levels of vitamin A, iron, folic acid, vitamin C, and iodine were provided for all working days during 4 months Control (placebo) (N = 54): 100 g of biscuits furnishing 497 kcal and 11.36 g of protein per day were provided to the control group for 4 months | Body mass index (BMI), BMI Z-score, weight-for-height, height-for-age |
Hettiarrachchi, 2007 [31] | Individually randomized trial | School in the Galle district, Sri Lanka | 821 school children | Children were supplemented with two capsules per day containing the following: Group 1: Iron (50 mg/day) in the form of ferrous fumarate (N = 202) Group 2: Zinc (14 mg/day) in the form of zinc sulfate (N = 213) Group 3: Combined (iron + zinc) (N = 216) Group 4: Placebo made of anhydrous lactose (N = 190) | Height, weight, body mass index (BMI), height-for-age, weight-for-age, stunted, underweight, hemoglobin, serum zinc, serum ferritin |
Hyder, 2007 [35] | Individually randomized trial | Conducted in 54 non-formal primary education schools operated by the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee (BRAC) in Sherpur district, Dhaka | 1125 adolescent girls | Group 1 (N = 559): Powdered beverage fortified with multiple micronutrients and packaged in sachets Control (N = 566): Placebo beverage | Weight, height, mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC), body mass index (BMI), hemoglobin, serum ferritin, serum retinol, serum zinc |
Khadilkar, 2010 [32] | Individually randomized trial | State run school in Pune, India | 50 adolescent girls | Group 1 (N = 25): Subjects in the treatment group were administered 6 vitamin D2 (ergocalciferol; Celltech, UK) tablets each containing 1.25 mg (50,000 IU) orally at 1, 4, 7, and 10 months Group 2 (N = 25): Placebo group; the local pharmacist prepared tablets containing only sucrose | Total body bone mineral content, lumbar spine bone mineral content and lumbar spine bone mineral apparent density, total body lean, fat mass, and serum concentrations of biochemical parameters |
Sen, 2009 [33,38,39] | Cluster randomized trial | Municipal primary schools in Vadodara, India | 358 girls | Group 1 (N = 94): The participants were given IFA tablets (100 mg elemental iron + 0.5 mg folic acid) once weekly Group 2 (N = 118): The participants were given IFA tablets (100 mg elemental iron + 0.5 mg folic acid) twice weekly Group 3 (N = 81): The participants were given IFA tablets (100 mg elemental iron + 0.5 mg folic acid) daily Group 4 (N = 65): Control group did not receive any intervention | Hemoglobin, body mass index (BMI), cognitive test score) |
Soekarjo, 2004 [36] | Cluster randomized trial | Schools in Indonesia from both urban and rural locations | 5166 adolescents aged 12–15 years | Group 1 (N = 1033): weekly 10,000 IU vitamin A Group 2 (N = 1045): weekly 60 mg elemental iron (as ferrous sulfate) plus 250 mg folate Group 3 (N = 1130): weekly 10,000 IU vitamin A and 60 mg elemental iron plus 250 mg folate Group 4 (N = 1958): Did not receive any supplement | Hemoglobin concentration, serum retinol concentrations |
Zhu, 2005 [34,40,41] | Individually randomized trial | Schools in urban Beijing, China | 757 adolescent girls | Group 1 (N = 238): Girls consumed a carton of 330 mL milk fortified with Ca on school days over the study period Group 2 (N = 260): Girls received the same quantity of milk additionally fortified with 5 or 8 mg cholecalciferol Group 3 (N = 259): Control girls did not receive any intervention | Nutrient intake, bone mineral content, bone mineral density, serum PTH, serum calcium, height, weight and vitamin D levels |
Studies | Service Delivery | Health Workforce | Information Systems | Access to Supplies | Financing | Leadership |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Agarwal, 2003 | Delivery of iron supplements in school | Probably through school teachers | Not specified | Iron/folate supplements were provided by researchers | UNICEF, New Delhi | Researchers |
Chiplonkar, 2012 | Delivery of food supplements and zinc tablets in school | Probably through school teachers | Not specified | Food supplements and zinc tablets provided by researchers | Zensar Foundation, Pune, India | Researchers |
Februhartanty, 2002 | Delivery of iron supplements in schools | Delivered through school teachers | Not specified | Iron supplements were provided by researchers | SEAMEO-TROPMED Regional Center for Community Nutrition in Jakarta | Researchers |
Goyle, 2012 | Supplement biscuits in schools | Probably through school teachers | Not specified | Biscuits were supplied through researcher | University Grants Commission, New Delhi, India | Researchers |
Hettiarachchi, 2007 | Iron and zinc supplements provided in schools | Delivered through teachers and investigators | Not specified | Supplements were provided by the researchers | The study was funded by the International Atomic Energy Agency | Researchers |
Hyder, 2007 | Iron fortified beverage provided in school | Delivered through school teachers with the assistance of the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee (BRAC) community health workers | Not specified | Supplements were provided by the researchers | Supported by the Micronutrient Initiative, Ottawa, Canada | Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee (BRAC) |
Khadilkar, 2010 | Vitamin D supplements were provided in school | The tablets were supplied to participants monthly by trial staff | Not specified | Supplements were provided by the researchers | Not specified | Researchers |
Sen, 2009 | Iron/folic acid supplements were provided in schools | Investigators, monitors, class teachers | Not specified | Supplements were provided by the researchers | None | Researchers |
Soekarjo, 2004 | Vitamin A, iron, and folate supplements were provided in the schools | Field workers supervised the supplement intake | Not specified | Supplements were produced locally and provided by the researcher | This study was funded by USAID through the OMNI project | Researchers |
Zhu, 2005 | Milk supplementation given in schools | Probably through school teachers | Not specified | Milk supplementation given in schools | Australian Dairy Research and Development Corporation, Murray Goulburn Co-operative Co. Limited, and the Nestle’ Foundation provided financial support for the laboratory analyses | Researchers |
Patient or Population: Adolescents Settings: Schools Intervention: Micronutrient supplementation/fortification Comparison: Placebo/no supplementation/no fortification | |||||
Outcomes | Illustrative Comparative Risks * (95% CI) | Relative Effect (95% CI) | No of Participants (Studies) | Quality of the Evidence (GRADE) | |
Assumed Risk | Corresponding Risk | ||||
Placebo/No Supplementation | Micronutrient Supplementation/Fortification | ||||
Daily Iron Supplementation with or without Folic Acid: Anemia | Study population | RR 1.04 (0.88 to 1.24) | 1160 (one study) | ⊕⊕⊝⊝ low 1,2 | |
206 of 579 | 216 of 581 | ||||
Weekly Iron Supplementation with or without Folic Acid: Anemia | Study population | RR 1.07 (0.91 to 1.26) | 1274 (one study) | ⊕⊕⊝⊝ low 1,2 | |
206 of 579 | 265 of 695 | ||||
Calcium/Vitamin D Supplementation/Fortification: BMI | Study population | MD −0.01 (−1.2 to 1.17) | 730 (2 studies) | ⊕⊝⊝⊝ very low 1,2,3 | |
The mean BMI ranged between 18.15 and 18.5 | The mean BMI ranged between 17.05 and 19.1 | ||||
Iron Supplementation with or without Folic Acid: BMI | Study population | MD 0.29 (−0.25 to 0.83) | 652 (2 studies) | ⊕⊝⊝⊝ very low 1,2,3 | |
The mean BMI ranged between 15.78 and 16.23 | The mean BMI ranged between 15.67 and 17.25 | ||||
Zinc Supplementation: BMI | Study population | MD 0.35 (−0.15 to 0.85) | 382 (one study) | ⊕⊝⊝⊝ very low 1,2,3 | |
The mean BMI was 16.23 | The mean BMI was 16.58 | ||||
MMN Fortification: BMI | Study population | MD 0.23 (−0.11 to 0.57) | 943 (2 studies) | ⊕⊝⊝⊝ very low 1,2,3 | |
The mean BMI ranged between 15.27 and 16.5 | The mean BMI ranged between 15.42 and 17.1 |
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Salam, R.A.; Das, J.K.; Ahmed, W.; Irfan, O.; Sheikh, S.S.; Bhutta, Z.A. Effects of Preventive Nutrition Interventions among Adolescents on Health and Nutritional Status in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Nutrients 2020, 12, 49. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12010049
Salam RA, Das JK, Ahmed W, Irfan O, Sheikh SS, Bhutta ZA. Effects of Preventive Nutrition Interventions among Adolescents on Health and Nutritional Status in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Nutrients. 2020; 12(1):49. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12010049
Chicago/Turabian StyleSalam, Rehana A, Jai K Das, Wardah Ahmed, Omar Irfan, Sana Sadiq Sheikh, and Zulfiqar A Bhutta. 2020. "Effects of Preventive Nutrition Interventions among Adolescents on Health and Nutritional Status in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis" Nutrients 12, no. 1: 49. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12010049
APA StyleSalam, R. A., Das, J. K., Ahmed, W., Irfan, O., Sheikh, S. S., & Bhutta, Z. A. (2020). Effects of Preventive Nutrition Interventions among Adolescents on Health and Nutritional Status in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Nutrients, 12(1), 49. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12010049