Elsevier

SSM - Population Health

Volume 2, December 2016, Pages 95-104
SSM - Population Health

Article
Why is multiple micronutrient powder ineffective at reducing anaemia among 12–24 month olds in Colombia? Evidence from a randomised controlled trial

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmph.2016.02.004Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • In contrast to other studies, MNP did not increase haemoglobin in Colombian infants.

  • We conclude that MNP was both ineffective and inefficacious in our population.

  • This is likely due to two differences from populations where MNP has been successful.

  • First, rates anaemia in Colombia peak at earlier ages (6–12 months) and fall quicker.

  • Second, anaemia is less (and increasingly less with age) related to iron deficiency.

Abstract

In Colombia’s bottom socio-economic strata, 46.6% of children under two are anaemic. A prevalence of above 20% falls within the WHO guidelines for daily supplementation with multiple micronutrient powder (MNP). To evaluate the effect of daily MNP supplementation on anaemia amongst Colombian children aged 12–24 months we ran a cluster RCT (n=1440). In previous work, we found the intervention had no impact on haemoglobin or anaemia in this population. In this current paper, we investigate this null result and find it cannot be explained by an underpowered study design, inaccurate measurements, low adoption of and compliance with the intervention, or crowding out through dietary substitution. We conclude that our intervention was ineffective at reducing rates of childhood anaemia because MNP itself was inefficacious in our population, rather than poor implementation of or adherence to the planned intervention. Further analysis of our data and secondary data suggests that the evolution with age of childhood anaemia in Colombia, and its causes, appear different from those in settings where MNP has been effective. Firstly, rates of anaemia peak at much earlier ages and then fall rapidly. Secondly, anaemia that remains after the first year of life is relatively, and increasingly as children get older, unrelated to iron deficiency. We suggest that factors during gestation, birth, breastfeeding and early weaning may be important in explaining very high rates of anaemia in early infancy. However, the adverse effects of these factors appear to be largely mitigated by the introduction of solid foods that often include meat. This renders population wide MNP supplementation, provided after a diet of solid foods has become established, an ineffective instrument with which to target Colombia’s childhood anaemia problem.

Keywords

Anaemia
Iron-deficiency
Haemoglobin
Colombia
Micronutrients
Multiple micronutrient powder
Child
Nutrition

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