A Novel School-based Intermittent Delivery System of Iron Supplements for Highly Marginalized Tarahumara Indigenous Women of Reproductive Age of Northern Mexico.

A Novel School-based Intermittent Delivery System of Iron Supplements for Highly Marginalized Tarahumara Indigenous Women of Reproductive Age of Northern Mexico. Ecol Food Nutr. 2019 Nov 11;:1-17 Authors: Crispino V, Monárrez-Espino J Abstract To develop a novel delivery scheme to bridge the Mexican health system with highly isolated indigenous communities by involving naturally occurring social links: households and boarding schools. This was a school-based placebo-controlled trial with a follow-up period of 16 weeks. Children whose mothers fulfilled the inclusion criteria for anemia acted as iron supplement carriers between schools and homes. Adherence was measured based on teachers' and mothers' records. An effectiveness sub-analysis assessed changes in biochemical profiles according to random allocation to either supplementation or placebo groups. There was an overall high adherence in both groups. Analyses revealed that schooling years, literacy, and walking times played a role in high adherence. Logistic regression showed that women had higher adherence odds on the basis of household size, walking times, and previous inclusion in supplement distributions. Adherence significantly decreased the proportion of anemia by 48.2% in the intervention group. The difference at baseline and endpoint significantly reduced the number of iron-deficient anemic women by 67.7% in the supplementation group. This delivery method is a valid alter...
Source: Ecology of Food and Nutrition - Category: Nutrition Tags: Ecol Food Nutr Source Type: research