Bowie Cameron, Kalilani Linda, Marsh Reg, Misiri Humphrey, Cleary Paul, Bowie Claire
Department of Community Health, College of Medicine, University of Malawi, Blantyre, Malawi.
Nutr J. 2005 Mar 21;4:12. doi: 10.1186/1475-2891-4-12.
The effect of food supplementation provided by the World Food Programme to patients and their families enrolled in a predominantly HIV/AIDS home based care programme in Bangwe Malawi is assessed.
The survival and nutritional status of patients and the nutritional status of their families recruited up to six months before a food supplementation programme started are compared to subsequent patients and their families over a further 12 months.
360 patients, of whom 199 died, were studied. Food supplementation did not improve survival but had an effect (not statistically significant) on nutritional status. Additional oil was given to some families; it may have improved survival but not nutritional status.
Food supplementation to HIV/AIDS home based care patients and their families does not work well. This may be because the intervention is too late to affect the course of disease or insufficiently targeted perhaps due to problems of distribution in an urban setting. The World Food Programme's emphasis on supplementary feeding for these families needs to be reviewed.
评估世界粮食计划署向马拉维班圭一个主要的艾滋病毒/艾滋病居家护理项目中的患者及其家庭提供食物补充的效果。
将食物补充项目开始前最多六个月招募的患者及其家庭的生存和营养状况,与接下来12个月内招募的患者及其家庭进行比较。
研究了360名患者,其中199人死亡。食物补充并未改善生存状况,但对营养状况有影响(无统计学意义)。一些家庭额外获得了食用油;这可能改善了生存状况,但未改善营养状况。
向艾滋病毒/艾滋病居家护理患者及其家庭提供食物补充效果不佳。这可能是因为干预为时已晚,无法影响疾病进程,或者由于在城市环境中分发问题导致目标不够精准。世界粮食计划署对这些家庭补充喂养的重视需要重新审视。