Multiple ‐micronutrient supplementation: Evidence from large‐scale prenatal programmes on coverage, compliance and impact

Abstract Micronutrient deficiencies during pregnancy pose important challenges for public‐health, given the potential adverse outcomes not only during pregnancy but across the life‐course. Provision of iron‐folic acid (IFA) supplements is the strategy most commonly practiced and recommended globally. How to successfully implement IFA and multiple micronutrient supplementation interventions among pregnant women and to achieve sustainable/permanent solutions to prenatal micronutrient deficiencies remain unresolved issues in many countries. This paper aims to analyse available experiences of prenatal IFA and multiple micronutrient interventions to distil learning for their effective planning and large‐scale implementation. Relevant articles and programme‐documentation were comprehensively identified from electronic databases, websites of major‐agencies and through hand‐searching of relevant documents. Retrieved documents were screened and potentially relevant reports were critically examined by the authors with the aim of identifying a set of case studies reflecting regional variation, a mix of implementation successes and failures, and a mix of programmes and large‐scale experimental studies. Information on implementation, coverage, compliance, and impact was extracted from reports of large‐scale interventions in Central America, Southeast Asia, South Asia, and Sub‐Saharan Africa. The WHO/CDC Logic‐Model for Micronutrient Interventions in Public Health was...
Source: Maternal and Child Nutrition - Category: Nutrition Authors: Tags: SUPPLEMENT ARTICLE Source Type: research