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Evidence-Based Lessons From Two Decades of Implementation Research on Complementary Feeding Programmes.

Tina G Sanghvi1, Sandra Remancus1, Edward A Frongillo2

  • 1Alive and Thrive, FHI360, Washington, DC, USA.

Maternal & Child Nutrition
|February 28, 2025
PubMed
Summary

Improving child nutrition through evidence-based complementary feeding programs is crucial. Multi-level interventions, stakeholder engagement, and behavioral science approaches effectively improved infant and young child diets across diverse countries.

Keywords:
child nutrition programmesconceptual frameworkcosts | interpersonal communicationlarge scalelow‐ and middle‐income countriesmass media

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Area of Science:

  • Public Health Nutrition
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Behavioral Science

Background:

  • Child nutrition significantly impacts long-term development.
  • Evidence-based frameworks are essential for large-scale dietary improvement in infants and young children.
  • Deficits in early childhood diets necessitate scalable solutions.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To review publications and impact evaluations on complementary feeding programs.
  • To identify effective strategies and underlying reasons for success in diverse country contexts.
  • To provide actionable insights for decision-makers on investing in complementary feeding.

Main Methods:

  • Systematic review of 32 publications and five impact evaluations.
  • Selection criteria included evidence quality, country diversity, and large-scale multi-level interventions.
  • Analysis focused on identifying successful program components and contextual factors.

Main Results:

  • Advocacy for complementary feeding and multi-stakeholder engagement are critical for national scale.
  • Behavioral science principles, including community engagement and mass media, synergistically improved outcomes.
  • Rigorous evaluations in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Nepal, Nigeria, and Vietnam showed substantial dietary improvements.
  • Intervention costs were manageable when focused, streamlined, and population-wide.

Conclusions:

  • Successful complementary feeding programs require a multi-faceted approach addressing access, marketing, knowledge, social norms, and maternal self-efficacy.
  • Evidence-based frameworks and implementation tools enable confident investment in improving child nutrition.
  • Scalable and cost-effective interventions can achieve significant impact on infant and young child diets globally.