Nutritional treatment of children with uncomplicated severe acute malnutrition (SAM) is based on ready-to-use therapeutic foods (RUTF). With treatment provided at community level, children could have access to other foods, and a reduction in the dose of RUTF could further increase dietary diversity during treatment. We assessed the dietary diversity score (DDS), the minimum dietary diversity (MDD), the minimum meal frequency (MMF) and the minimum acceptable diet (MAD) of 459 infants and young children aged 6–23 months being treated for SAM with different doses of RUTF. We also investigated the factors associated with DDS. Dietary intake was estimated using a single 24-h multipass dietary recall, 1 month after starting treatment, from December 2016 to August 2018. The DDS was calculated on the basis of eight food groups. Differences between children receiving the reduced RUTF and the standard RUTF dose and factors associated with DDS were assessed by Poisson and logistic regression models. RUTF dose was not associated with DDS (4.07 ± 1.25 for reduced RUTF and 4.01 ± 1.26 for standard RUTF; P = 0.77). Food groups most consumed by children were grains, roots or tubers (96%) and legumes and nuts (72%). Eggs consumption was low (3%). DDS was positively associated with child’s age, mother’s education, household wealth index, urban residence and rainy season. The present findings show that children with SAM consumed a variety of foods during treatment in addition to the RUTF ration prescribed to them. Reducing the dose of RUTF during SAM treatment did not impact DDS.
The MANGO study has been described in detail elsewhere (Kangas et al., 2019; Nikièma et al., 2021). In short, it was a randomized controlled non‐inferiority trial conducted in the health district of Fada N’Gourma, eastern region of Burkina Faso. The MANGO trial received the approval of the Ethical Committee (Comité d’éthique pour la Recherche en Santé) in Burkina Faso in December 2015 and the clinical trials board (Direction Générale de la Pharmacie, du Médicament et des Laboratoires) in September 2016. The study was conducted in 10 health centres. In 2018, in the eastern region, the prevalence of global acute malnutrition (GAM) defined by WHZ < −2 SD was estimated at 8.5% with 1.7% of SAM, defined as WHZ 10) were omitted from analyses. Possible predictors of DDS at individual, household, community and environmental levels have been selected to determine factors significantly associated with DDS (Abizari et al., 2017; Arsenault et al., 2014; Dafursa & Gebremedhin, 2019; Edris et al., 2018; Iqbal, 2017; Kuche et al., 2019). Given this, we selected at individual level some potential predictor variables such as child’s age (6–11 months or 12–23 months), sex (boy or girl), morbidity at last week before recall (yes or no), stunting at admission (yes or no), caregiver’s age ( = 25 years), caregiver’s education (no or yes) and caregiver’s ethnic group (Gourma, Mossi, Fulani, others). For household factors level, we selected food security status (food secure, mild food insecurity or moderate or severe food insecurity), household’s wealth index (low, medium or high), household’s water source (safe or unsafe) and household size ( = 5). Household’s residence (rural or urban) constituted a community‐level variable, and season of interview (dry or rainy) was considered an environmental‐level variable. To determine the factors significantly associated with DDS, multivariate standard Poisson regression analysis using a stepwise backward approach to model construction was computed (Dangura & Gebremedhin, 2017; Issaka, Agho, Page, et al., 2015b; Joshi et al., 2012; Mitchodigni et al., 2017) to estimate the coefficient and 95% confidence interval (CI). The association between each independent variable and DDS was initially assessed in unadjusted regression model; then variables with P‐value < 0.2 were entered for adjusted model. Assumptions of the adjusted regression model (linearity, absence of multicollinearity and homoscedasticity of error term) were checked (Casson & Farmer, 2014; Marill, 2004). Model fitness was assessed using Pearson goodness‐of‐fit P‐value (adjusted R‐squared value) and was satisfying. The outputs of the analyses are presented via crude and adjusted unstandardized Poisson regression coefficients (β). Findings were considered significant at P < 0.05. This study has been approved by the Burkina Faso Ethics Committee of Health Research. This trial was registered on 13 May 2016 at the IRSCTN registry (http://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN50039021).
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