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https://csirspace.foodresearchgh.site/handle/123456789/1297
Title: | Effect of green leafy vegetables powder on anaemia and vitamin-A status of Ghanaian school children |
Authors: | Egbi, G. Gbogbo, S. Mensah, G. E. Glover-Amengor, M. Steiner-Asiedu, M. |
Keywords: | Anaemia;Green leafy vegetable;Powder;School children;Vitamin-A;Deficiency;Prevalence |
Issue Date: | 2018 |
Publisher: | Springer Nature |
Citation: | BMC Nutrition, 4: 27, 1-10 |
Abstract: | Background: Nutritional anaemia and vitamin-A deficiency are public health issues confronting Ghanaian children. Their adverse effects are likely pronounced during the dry season when green leafy vegetables, rich-sources of iron and provitamin-A are scarce. This study assessed the effect of dried green leafy vegetables on anaemia and vitamin-A status of Ghanaian school children. Method: This was 3 months pretest, posttest nutrition intervention study. Children 4–9 years were randomized to receive or not receive supplement. High Performance Liquid Chromatography and Haemocue hemoglobinometer were used to determine vitamin-A and haemoglobin concentrations respectively. Malaria-parasitaemia and helminthes were examined by Giemsa-staining and Kato-Katz respectively. Nutritional status was assessed by anthropometry. Student’s t-test was used to establish significant differences between groups. Results: At baseline, the mean haemoglobin concentrations of control and supplemental were 116.9 ± 9.9 g/l and 117.6 ± 12.7 g/l respectively. At end-line, it was 121.9 ± 13.5 g/l for supplemental and 113.4 ± 8.5 g/l for control, significant at p = 0.001. At baseline prevalence of anaemia was 37.3 and 41.5% in control and supplemental respectively. At end-line it was 33.3% in supplemental against 57.5% in control, significant at p = 0.024. At baseline mean retinol concentrations were 16.79 ± 8.74 μg/dl and 16.97 ± 7.74 μg/dl for control and supplemental respectively. Mean retinol concentrations for control and supplemental were 24.35 ± 5.50 μg/dl and 26.96 ± 6.86 μg/dl respectively at end-line. At end-line 60% of control against 64.0% of supplemental had low vitamin-A status. At end-line, anaemic-control had mean retinol concentration of 23.78 ± 5.23 μg/dl and anaemic-supplemental had 27.46 ± 7.28 μg/dl. Prevalence of low vitamin-A status was 64.3 and 84.2% in anaemic-control and anaemic-supplemental respectively at baseline but it became 23.1 and 21.1% respectively, at end-line. The mean haemoglobin concentrations of anaemic-control and supplemental were 105.7 ± 7.5 g/l and 113.6 ± 13.6 g/l respectively at end-line. The change in prevalence of anaemia between the anaemic groups was 12.2%, significant at p = 0.042 |
URI: | https://csirspace.foodresearchgh.site/handle/123456789/1297 |
ISSN: | 2055-0928 |
Journal Name: | BMC Nutrition |
Appears in Collections: | Food Research Institute |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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BMC_Nutrition_4_Egbi_et al.pdf | 581.12 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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