Anemia Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Invisible Fishers: Empowering and Safeguarding Women in Fisheries Value Chains in Ghana to Reduce Anemia
This pilot study aims to introduce three interventions directed toward mitigating anemia among women in Ghana, including: 1) multi-sectoral behavior change, 2) strengthening market engagement of fish processors, 3) improving fish smoking technology and practices. These interventions will be implemented among female fish processors, a population that represents a promising focal area for intervention within fisheries value chains, which have been identified as a uniquely promising sector for intervention to mitigate anemia among women. The investigators expect that the findings from this study will inform understanding of how best to design, implement, and evaluate interventions into fisheries and other animal-source food value chains in Ghana and across sub-Saharan Africa to address anemia and other nutritional and health concerns.
Anemia among women of reproductive age remains an intractable public health problem in many
low- and middle-income countries, especially in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) where more than
one-third of women of reproductive age are anemic. The complex etiology of anemia suggests
the importance of designing interventions that address both nutritional deficiencies and
environmental drivers of anemia risk. This proposed research builds on new knowledge
generated from ongoing formative research by our investigator team aimed at understanding the
potential for interventions into animal-source food (ASF) value chains to influence anemia
among adolescent girls and women in Ghana. The investigators have identified fisheries value
chains in Ghana as a uniquely promising sector for intervention to mitigate anemia among
women. Specifically, our research indicates that fish processing is the most promising focal
area for intervention within fisheries value chains to address anemia among women. Therefore,
the overall research objective of this proposed research is to develop, adapt, and pilot test
a set of interventions into fisheries value chains in Ghana aimed at mitigating anemia among
women. Specifically, the investigators aim to: 1) define the scope, feasibility, and
scalability of priority intervention strategies that have been identified through our ongoing
formative research, 2) adapt the interventions to the proposed study contexts, and 3) design
and pilot test specific implementation strategies, as well as a monitoring and evaluation
(M&E) framework for assessing intervention delivery, uptake, impacts, and mechanisms of
impact at multiple loci along hypothesized program impact pathways.
Our ongoing formative research and an extended consultation process with stakeholders and
community participants have identified priority strategies for intervention within fisheries
value chains in Ghana that are feasible, scalable, likely to reduce anemia through multiple
mechanisms, and for which there is clear potential for sustainability of impact. The
investigators expect that the pilot testing of these interventions and the associated M&E
framework will directly inform the design, implementation and evaluation of a full randomized
controlled trial (RCT) that will evaluate the effectiveness of these interventions on anemia
mitigation among women in Ghana. As such, the design of this pilot research will mimic that
of a RCT with three distinct treatments delivered to women in separate study arms, each arm
reflecting the priority intervention strategies identified through our ongoing formative
research:
- Treatment Arm 1 (TA1): a multi-sectoral anemia behavior change intervention focused on
promoting a diversity of anemia-mitigating behaviors including consumption of
micronutrient-rich ASFs, malaria and soil-transmitted helminth control practices, and
water, sanitation and hygiene best practices (TA1 is also a component of Treatment Arms
2 and 3);
- Treatment Arm 2 (TA2): an intervention aimed at strengthening women fish processors'
engagement with markets through a group-based microcredit scheme, providing
entrepreneurship training, and facilitating enhanced access to market price information;
- Treatment Arm 3 (TA3): an intervention introducing improved fish smoking technology and
practices to women processors aimed both at improving earnings and reducing harmful
occupational exposures associated with fish smoking.
The investigators will recruit a total of 120 total participants from 12 communites in two
regions of Ghana that represent marine and fresh water small-scale fisheries systems.
Participants will be recruited into a nine-month pilot intervention with data collection
occurring at baseline prior to the start of the intervention, at the middle point of
intervention implementation, and at endline immediately following completion of intervention
implementation. The investigators will use survey-based instruments, direct observation,
participant diaries, anthropometric and dietary assessment, occupational exposure assessment,
as well as analysis of blood and stool specimens to evaluate changes in anemia, micronutrient
status, inflammation and infection, as well as changes in participants' knowledge, attitudes,
behaviors, and exposures that the investigators hypothesize are linked to intervention
exposure. Such an analysis is critical for understanding the relative importance of different
mechanisms of impact for each intervention. The investigators will further carry out
qualitative, semi-structured interviews with study participants and project implementation
staff to understand their perceptions of the interventions, factors that facilitated or
prevented successful implementation and uptake of interventions, and their perceptions of
positive and negative changes resulting from participation in the project. These insights
will be important for addressing our proposed research questions related to defining the
scope of the proposed interventions, and assessing the feasibility of intervention uptake and
implementation. A final project assessment workshop will also be carried out to internally
assess the strengths and limitations of the project's M&E framework.
Smoked fish value chains in Ghana have clear potential to influence anemia risk among women
fish smokers via multiple, potentially interconnected and contradictory mechanisms. More
broadly, these value chains also have significant potential to affect the nutrition and
health status of coastal and lake communities and of consumers across the country whose diets
are profoundly shaped by these value chains. The investigators expect that the findings of
this research will significantly contribute to understanding how best to design, implement,
and evaluate interventions into fisheries and other ASF value chains in Ghana and across SSA
to address anemia and related nutrition and health concerns.
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