Abstract:
Introduction: Nutrition security continues to worsen in sub-Saharan Africa.
Current research is limited on how seasonality may influence the impact of
nutrition, culinary, and production interventions on food security, diet quality, and
consumption of African Indigenous Vegetables (AIV); a culturally accepted source
of micro-and-macronutrients that are easily produced due to their adaptation to
the local environment. The objective of this study was to evaluate the programmatic
impact of AIV interventions on nutrition security among smallholder farmers.
Methods: In a randomized control trial, five target counties in Western Kenya were
randomly assigned to one of four treatments: (1) control; (2) production intervention
(PI); (3) nutrition and culinary intervention (NCI); and (4) NCI and PI (NCI/PI). After
the counties were randomly assigned to a treatment, 503 smallholder farmers (18–
65 years) were selected from participatory farmer groups. The PI consisted of five
agricultural production modules delivered between 2016 and 2019. The NCI was
delivered twice: (1) household nutrition education (2017) and (2) community culinary
training (2019). The NCI/PI included communities receiving both interventions
at these time periods. Baseline and endline surveys were administered to all
participants once in October 2016 (harvest season) and to all available participants
(n=250) once in June to July 2019 (dry season), respectively. The impact evaluation
was analyzed by Household Hunger Scale (HHS), Women’s Dietary Diversity Score
(WDDS), AIV consumption frequency, and AIV market availability. Statistical tests
included descriptive statistics (means and frequencies), paired t-test, McNemar’s
test, Wilcoxon Signed-Rank test, ANOVA test with Tukey post hoc, and χ2 test.
Open-ended questions were aggregated, and responses were selected based on
relevancy and thoroughness of the response to provide context to the quantitative
data. A value of p<0.05 was used to denote statistical significance.
Results: There was an overall decrease in WDDS, HHS, and consumption frequency
between baseline and endline attributed to seasonal differences. Despite this,
post-intervention, households that received NCI/PI had a higher WDDS relative
to the control: WDDS 5.1±1.8 vs. 4.2±1.5, p=0.035. In addition, between baselineand endline, there was an overall increase in the percentage of respondents that
reported an adequate supply of key AIVs, particularly for households that received
PI. Furthermore, seasonal effects caused a reported shift in the primary location
for purchasing AIVs from the village to the town market. There was no reported
difference in HHS. While “diet awareness” significantly influenced diet quality
among the NCI treatment group, “production” was reported to have the greatest
influence on diet quality among all intervention groups.
Discussion: The findings revealed that coupled nutrition, culinary, and production
interventions could create a protective effect against seasonal fluctuations in the
availability and affordability of AIV as evidenced by a higher WDDs.
Conclusion and Recommendations: These findings suggest that future
programming and policy should focus on promoting the availability, accessibility,
acceptability, and affordability of improved agronomic practices and germplasm
for both smallholder farmers with particular emphasis on AIV varieties that
contain high levels of micro-and macronutrients, improved agronomic
characteristics (e.g., delayed flowering, multiple harvests, higher yields, and
disease resistance), and are aligned with the communities’ cultural preferences. In
addition, agricultural training and extension services should incorporate nutrition
and culinary interventions that emphasize the importance of farmers prioritizing
harvests for their household consumption.