Abstract

Boosting smallholder food production can potentially improve children’s nutrition in rural Sub-Saharan Africa through a production-own consumption pathway and an income-food purchase pathway. Rigorously designed studies are needed to provide evidence for nutrition impact, but are often difficult to implement in agricultural projects. Within the framework of a large agricultural development project supporting legume production (N2Africa), we studied the potential to improve children’s dietary diversity by comparing N2Africa and non-N2Africa households in a cross-sectional quasi-experimental design, followed by structural equation modelling (SEM) and focus group discussions in rural Ghana and Kenya. Comparing N2Africa and non-N2Africa households, we found that participating in N2Africa was not associated with improved dietary diversity of children. However, for soybean, SEM indicated a relatively good fit to the posteriori model in Kenya but not in Ghana, and in Kenya only the production-own consumption pathway was fully supported, with no effect through the income-food purchase pathway. Results are possibly related to differences in the food environment between the two countries, related to attribution of positive characteristics to soybean, the variety of local soybean-based dishes, being a new crop or not, women’s involvement in soybean cultivation, the presence of markets, and being treated as a food or cash crop. These findings confirm the importance of the food environment for translation of enhanced crop production into improved human nutrition. This study also shows that in a situation where rigorous study designs cannot be implemented, SEM is a useful option to analyse whether agriculture projects have the potential to improve nutrition.

Highlights

  • Over two billion people suffer from multiple micronutrient deficiencies worldwide, with high prevalence among young children in sub-Saharan Africa (Muthayya et al 2013)

  • We found no association between participating in this agricultural intervention designed to boost grain legume production and the dietary diversity of children based on a cross-sectional quasi-experimental study

  • More households were cultivating grain legumes, especially soybean, in the N2Africa group (100% in Ghana and in Kenya) than in non-N2Africa group (88.1% in Ghana and 94.8% in Kenya) but we found no differences in total grain legume production among the households cultivating legumes between the two groups in neither Ghana nor Kenya

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Over two billion people suffer from multiple micronutrient deficiencies worldwide, with high prevalence among young children in sub-Saharan Africa (Muthayya et al 2013). The majority of malnourished people live in rural areas and depend on agriculture as an important source of the food and income required for their nutrition and health (Pinstrup-Andersen 2012). Boosting the production of grain legumes by smallholder farmers is a feasible option to improve nutrition in rural areas. Compared with maize, which is the most commonly produced and consumed staple in sub-Saharan Africa, legumes are better sources of high quality protein and contain a larger variety and greater concentration of micronutrients (de Jager 2013; FAO et al 2012; Lukmanji et al 2008)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call