Abstract

Childhood obesity has been associated with consumption of energy‐dense foods such as caloric beverages and fast foods. Many low‐ and middle‐income countries like Bangladesh are now experiencing a rising problem of noncommunicable diseases along with the long‐standing problem of stunting and undernutrition. WASH Benefits Bangladesh was a large community‐based cluster randomized controlled trial conducted in rural Bangladesh. Study clusters were randomized into seven arms: single nutrition (N); water (W); sanitation (S); hygiene (H); combined water, sanitation, and hygiene (WSH); WSH and nutrition (N + WSH); and a double sized control (C). Nutrition intervention messages included four promotional components: maternal nutrition, breastfeeding, complementary feeding, and lipid‐based nutrient supplements. The World Health Organization infant food frequency questionnaire (24‐hr recall and 7‐day recall) was administered at Year 1 and Year 2 of intervention. The likelihood of any snack food consumption was significantly lower (odds ratio 0.37: 95% confidence interval [0.28, 0.49]) in the nutrition intervention arms compared to the control arm in Year 2 follow‐up. In addition, in the water intervention arm, fewer children (about 50% less) consumed soft drinks, but not the other sugar‐sweetened beverages, compared with control in Year 2. There were no other differences between groups. Simple messages about balanced diet and feeding family foods were effective in lowering commercially produced snack food consumption of the young children in low‐income rural communities of Bangladesh. Provision of safe water apparently encouraged mothers to reduce offering unhealthy beverages to the young children.

Highlights

  • A substantial worldwide increase in childhood obesity has posed a major global health challenge

  • In this randomized controlled trial of nutrition, water, sanitation, and hygiene, children participating in the nutrition intervention were less likely to consume sweets or packaged snack food items

  • Snack food consumption was significantly lower in the nutrition intervention arms compared with the control arm, in the Year 2 follow-up

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Summary

Introduction

A substantial worldwide increase in childhood obesity has posed a major global health challenge. A longitudinal study on children of low socioeconomic status from Brazil found that early ultraprocessed food consumption as a proportion of daily energy was associated with altered lipoprotein profile (Rauber, Campagnolo, Hoffman, & Vitolo, 2015); ultraprocessed foods are not made from whole foods but from their derivatives and food additives (Monteiro et al, 2012). Snacking habits such as consumption of sweet snacks, candy, and chips were associated with other adverse health outcomes including dental caries in young children (Johansson, Holgerson, Kressin, Nunn, & Tanner, 2010). Energy-dense, nutrient-poor foods have become more accessible to people at a lower cost due to developments in agriculture and food technologies (Drewnowski & Specter, 2004)

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