Parental Misperceptions on Child Nutrition in India: Implications for Child Feeding Practices and Growth

NCT ID: NCT06473025

Last Updated: 2024-10-17

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

1542 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2024-09-18

Study Completion Date

2025-05-31

Brief Summary

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The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to examine the role of parental misperceptions and information gaps in contributing to poor child dietary practices and high child undernutrition rates in India. The main research questions it seeks to answer are:

1. Do mothers systematically overestimate the nutritional status (height- and weight-for-age percentiles) of their children, relative to global World Health Organization (WHO) standards and other children in their region?,
2. Do mothers underestimate the returns to child nutrition on long-term health, education, and labor market outcomes?,
3. What mechanisms could explain the formation of such misperceptions? Are mothers with higher exposure to undernourished children more likely to overestimate their children's nutritional status?, and
4. Would updating mothers' beliefs about a) their children's true height-for-age and weight-for-age percentiles, and/or b) the returns to child nutrition, improve child feeding practices, utilization of government nutrition services, and child growth outcomes?

The study involves an individual-level randomized controlled trial with 1500 mothers of children aged 7-24 months in Telangana, India, with two information treatment arms and one control arm. The first treatment will update mothers' beliefs on the relative height- and weight-for-age percentiles of their children, and the second will provide information on the impacts of child undernutrition on long-term health (risk of chronic and infectious diseases, mortality), education (high school test scores, years of education), and labor market (earnings) outcomes.

The treatment and control groups will be compared to assess if the information treatments improve outcomes related to child feeding practices, consumption of government-supplied therapeutic food, cognition measures, and child growth.

Detailed Description

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The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to examine the role of parental misperceptions and information gaps in contributing to poor child dietary practices and high rates of child undernutrition in India. This study is guided by two core hypotheses:

1. Parents systematically overestimate the nutritional status of their children: If parents form expectations about how healthy their child is by observing other children around them, then parents in areas with high levels of stunting and wasting may be more likely to believe that their own child is relatively healthy and have a skewed perception of "ideal" height and weight levels.
2. Parents systematically underestimate the returns to child nutrition on long-term health, education, and labor market outcomes: While there is a large literature documenting the effects of child nutrition on the incidence of infectious and chronic diseases, years of education, test scores, and earnings in adulthood, this information is most likely not common knowledge among parents in India, particularly in rural areas.

These misperceptions, if proven true, may create a suboptimal equilibrium for child nutrition outcomes, trapping families in a cycle of inadequate nutrition.

The main research questions are:

1. Do mothers systematically overestimate the nutritional status (height- and weight-for-age percentiles) of their children, relative to global WHO standards and other children in their region?,
2. Do mothers underestimate the returns to child nutrition on long-term health, education, and labor market outcomes?,
3. What mechanisms could explain the formation of such misperceptions? Are mothers with higher exposure to undernourished children more likely to overestimate their children's nutritional status?, and
4. Would updating mothers' beliefs about a) their children's true height-for-age and weight-for-age percentiles, and/or b) the returns to child nutrition, improve child feeding practices, utilization of government nutrition services, and child growth outcomes?

The research design involves an individual-level field experiment with 1500 mothers of children aged 7 to 24 months, with two treatment arms and a control arm:

* Treatment arm 1: Update mothers' beliefs on the height-for-age and weight-for-age percentiles of their child relative to a reference group of healthy children based on WHO standards
* Treatment arm 2: Treatment 1 + information on the impacts of child undernutrition on long-term health (risk of chronic and infectious diseases, mortality), education (high school test scores, years of education), and labor market (earnings) outcomes, synthesized from existing literature
* Control arm: Status-quo, no intervention

The main outcomes of interest are - a) willingness-to-pay (WTP) for a protein supplement/food bundle for the child, measured at the end of the baseline survey, and b) beliefs on child nutrition, c) child feeding practices (frequency of meals, diet diversity, diet adequacy, protein consumption) measured through a 24-hour diet recall module, d) consumption of government-supplied therapeutic food, e) child height, weight, and anthropometric z-scores, f) child health outcomes: episodes of illness, g) household food expenditures, and h) child cognition measures, measured during the endline survey.

Conditions

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Child Malnutrition

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

* Treatment arm 1: Update mothers' beliefs on the height-for-age and weight-for-age percentiles of their child relative to a reference group of healthy children based on WHO standards
* Treatment arm 2: Treatment 1 + information on the impacts of child undernutrition on health (risk of chronic and infectious diseases, mortality), education (high school test scores, years of education), and labor market (earnings) outcomes, synthesized from existing literature
* Control arm: Status-quo, no intervention
Primary Study Purpose

OTHER

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Treatment Arm 1: Relative Nutritional Status

Provide information on the true height-for-age and weight-for-age percentiles of the child relative to a reference group of healthy children based on WHO standards

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Information on Relative Nutritional Status

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

The intervention involves providing information on the height-for-age and weight-for-age percentiles of children relative to a reference group of healthy children based on WHO standards

Treatment Arm 2: Relative Nutritional Status and Returns

Provide information on the true height-for-age and weight-for-age percentiles of the child relative to a reference group of healthy children based on WHO standards AND provide information on the impacts of child undernutrition on health (risk of chronic and infectious diseases, mortality), education (high school test scores, years of education), and labor market (earnings) outcomes, synthesized from existing literature

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Information on Relative Nutritional Status

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

The intervention involves providing information on the height-for-age and weight-for-age percentiles of children relative to a reference group of healthy children based on WHO standards

Information on Returns to Child Nutrition

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

The intervention involves providing information on the effects of child undernutrition on long-term health, education, and labor market outcomes.

Control Arm

Status-quo, no intervention

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

Interventions

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Information on Relative Nutritional Status

The intervention involves providing information on the height-for-age and weight-for-age percentiles of children relative to a reference group of healthy children based on WHO standards

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Information on Returns to Child Nutrition

The intervention involves providing information on the effects of child undernutrition on long-term health, education, and labor market outcomes.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Biological mothers of sampled children aged 7-24 months

Exclusion Criteria

* Any medical/health condition that precludes individuals from understanding the study procedures or communicating with study personnel (eg. deafness, inability to speak, mental health conditions)
Eligible Sex

FEMALE

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Center for Effective Global Action (CEGA)

UNKNOWN

Sponsor Role collaborator

Median Insights and Research, India

UNKNOWN

Sponsor Role collaborator

University of Southern California

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Jeffrey Broadman Weaver

Assistant Professor

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Sneha Nimmagadda, M.Sc.

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

University of Southern California

Locations

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Department of Women Development and Child Welfare

Hyderabad, Telangana, India

Site Status

Countries

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India

Other Identifiers

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APP-24-02211-2

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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