Increased birthweight after prenatal dietary supplementation of rural African women

1987 
Birthweight data from 197 rural Gambian women who received an energy-dense prenatal dietary supplement over a 4 year period (net intake = 430 kcal/day) was compared with data from 182 women from 4 baseline years. Preintervention birthweights averaged 2944 +or- 43 (SEM) grams when women were in positive energy balance during the dry harvest season (pregnancy weight gain 1200 gram/month). Birthweights decreased 2808 +or- 41 grams (p0.01) in the wet season when food shortages and agricultural work caused negative energy balance (weight gain 500 grams/month). There were no detectable secular trends in the baseline data. Supplementation was ineffective during the dry season but highly effective during the wet season: +225 +or- 56 frams p0.001 (unadjusted) or +200 +or- 53 grams p0.001 (adjusted for sex season and parity) by between-child multiple regression analysis; +231 +or- 65 grams p0.001 by within-mother analysis. The proportion of babies of low birthweight (2501 grams) decreased from 23.7 to 7.5% p0.002. The observed threshold effect emphasizes the importance of selective targeting of interventions to truly at-risk groups. (authors modified)
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