Diamond-Smith Nadia, Puri Mahesh C, Borak Lily, Walker Dilys, Charlebois Edwin, Weiser Sheri D, McDonald Christine M
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics and Institute for Global Health Sciences, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA
Center for Research on Environment, Population and Health Activities, Kathmandu, Nepal.
BMJ Open. 2025 Jul 25;15(7):e103488. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2025-103488.
Micronutrient deficiencies remain prominent drivers of adverse maternal and child health outcomes in Nepal. Gender-based inequalities and norms around women's status and access to nutrition exacerbate poor nutritional status. Many newly married, preconception women lack adequate nutrition due to delayed engagement with the health system and limited autonomy to prioritise their own health. To address this gap, the Sumadhur trial provides multiple micronutrient supplements (MMS) alongside a household-level behavioural intervention targeting newly married women, their husbands and mothers-in-law.
This will be a village-cluster randomised controlled trial across three districts in Nepal, enrolling 700 households, each comprising a triad of newly married woman, husband and mother-in-law. Villages will be randomised to receive either Sumadhur behavioural intervention+MMS (intervention) or standard of care (control). In intervention villages, participants will join weekly group sessions for 5 months, covering maternal and reproductive health, equitable household food allocation and nutrition information, and gender norms and household relationships. Women will receive three bottles of MMS (180 tablets each) over 18 months. Quantitative data collection at baseline, 6, 12 and 18 months will include surveys, venous blood draws (not at 12 months) and anthropometry. Primary outcomes will be anaemia prevalence and micronutrient status (iron, folate, vitamin B). Secondary outcomes will include reproductive behaviours, birth outcomes and intrahousehold relationship dynamics. A nested qualitative component will employ longitudinal in-depth interviews with triads to understand the mechanisms of behavioural change. Impact will be measured through an intention-to-treat approach using mixed-effects logistic regression analyses.
The study is approved by institutional review boards in the Ethics Board of the Nepal Health Research Council and the University of California, San Francisco IRB. Results will be disseminated to participating communities, local stakeholders and international audiences through workshops, peer-reviewed publications and policy briefs.All data will be made publicly available (deidentified) after the publication of the main impact paper.
NCT06810440.
微量营养素缺乏仍然是尼泊尔孕产妇和儿童健康不良结局的主要驱动因素。基于性别的不平等以及围绕妇女地位和营养获取的规范加剧了营养不良状况。许多新婚的孕前妇女由于与卫生系统接触延迟以及自主优先考虑自身健康的能力有限,缺乏充足的营养。为了填补这一空白,Sumadhur试验提供多种微量营养素补充剂(MMS),同时针对新婚妇女、其丈夫和婆婆进行家庭层面的行为干预。
这将是一项在尼泊尔三个地区进行的村庄集群随机对照试验,招募700户家庭,每户由新婚妇女、丈夫和婆婆组成。村庄将被随机分配接受Sumadhur行为干预+MMS(干预组)或标准护理(对照组)。在干预村庄,参与者将参加为期5个月的每周小组会议,内容涵盖孕产妇和生殖健康、公平的家庭食物分配和营养信息,以及性别规范和家庭关系。妇女将在18个月内分三次领取MMS(每次180片)。在基线、6个月、12个月和18个月进行的定量数据收集将包括调查、静脉血抽取(12个月时不进行)和人体测量。主要结局将是贫血患病率和微量营养素状况(铁、叶酸、维生素B)。次要结局将包括生殖行为、出生结局和家庭内部关系动态。一个嵌套的定性部分将对三人组进行纵向深入访谈,以了解行为改变的机制。将通过使用混合效应逻辑回归分析的意向性分析方法来衡量影响。
该研究已获得尼泊尔卫生研究理事会伦理委员会和加利福尼亚大学旧金山分校机构审查委员会的批准。研究结果将通过研讨会、同行评审出版物和政策简报传播给参与社区、当地利益相关者和国际受众。在主要影响论文发表后,所有数据将公开提供(去识别化)。
NCT06810440。