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      Impact of a Homestead Gardening Program on Household Food Security and Empowerment of Women in Bangladesh

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          Abstract

          This paper assesses the additional benefits of a homestead gardening program designed to control vitamin A deficiency in Bangladesh. In February and March 2002, data were collected on the food security and social status of women from 2,160 households of active and former participants in the gardening program and from control groups in order to assess the impact and sustainability of the program. The proportions of active and former-participant households that gardened year-round were fivefold and threefold, respectively, higher than that of the control group (78% and 50% vs. 15%). In a three-month period, the households of active participants produced a median of 135 kg and consumed a median of 85 kg of vegetables, while the control households produced a median of 46 kg and consumed a median of 38 kg (p <.001). About 64% of the active-participant households generated a median garden income of 347 taka (US$1 = 51 taka), which was spent mainly on food, and 25% of the control households generated 200 taka in the same period (p < .001). The garden production and income levels of formerly participating households three years after withdrawal of program support were much higher than those of the control households, illustrating the sustainability of the program and its ability to increase household food security. Significantly more women in active- and former-participant households than in control households perceived that they had increased their economic contribution to their households since the time the program was launched in their subdistricts (> 85% vs. 52%). Similar results were found for the level of influence gained by women on household decision-making. These results highlight the multiple benefits that homestead gardening programs can bring and demonstrate that these benefits should be considered when selecting nutritional and development approaches targeting poor households.

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          Lack of improvement in vitamin A status with increased consumption of dark-green leafy vegetables

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            Lack of improvement in vitamin A status with increased consumption of dark-green leafy vegetables.

            There is little evidence to support the general assumption that dietary carotenoids can improve vitamin A status. We investigated in Bogor District, West Java, Indonesia, the effect of an additional daily portion of dark-green leafy vegetables on vitamin A and iron status in women with low haemoglobin concentrations (< 130 g/L) who were breastfeeding a child of 3-17 months. Every day for 12 weeks one group (n = 57) received stir-fried vegetables, a second (n = 62) received a wafer enriched with beta-carotene, iron, vitamin C, and folic acid, and a third (n = 56) received a non-enriched wafer to control for additional energy intake. The vegetable supplement and the enriched wafer contained 3.5 mg beta-carotene, 5.2 mg and 4.8 mg iron, and 7.8 g and 4.4 g fat, respectively. Assignment to vegetable or wafer groups was by village. Wafers were distributed double-masked. In the enriched-wafer group there were increases in serum retinol (mean increase 0.32 [95% CI 0.23-0.40] mumol/L), breastmilk retinol (0.59 [0.35-0.84] mumol/L), and serum beta-carotene (0.73 [0.59-0.88] mumol/L). These changes differed significantly from those in the other two groups, in which the only significant changes were small increases in breastmilk retinol in the control-wafer group (0.16 [0.02-0.30] mumol/L) and in serum beta-carotene in the vegetable group (0.03 [0-0.06] mumol/L). Changes in iron status were similar in all three groups. An additional daily portion of dark-green leafy vegetables did not improve vitamin A status, whereas a similar amount of beta-carotene from a simpler matrix produced a strong improvement. These results suggest that the approach to combating vitamin A deficiency by increases in the consumption of provitamin A carotenoids from vegetables should be re-examined.
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              Food-Based Strategies to Control Vitamin A Deficiency

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Food and Nutrition Bulletin
                Food Nutr Bull
                SAGE Publications
                0379-5721
                1564-8265
                March 10 2005
                January 2005
                March 10 2005
                January 2005
                : 26
                : 1
                : 17-25
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Helen Keller International, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
                Article
                10.1177/156482650502600102
                15810795
                0189a97f-2533-4f5b-bc3e-238a458f5f36
                © 2005

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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