Background: Nutritional anemia is a public health problem among Ghanaian schoolchildren. There is need to employ dietary modification strategies to solve this problem through school and household feeding programs. Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of cowpea-based food containing fish meal served with vitamin C-rich drink to improve iron stores and hemoglobin concentrations in Ghanaian schoolchildren. Methods: The study involved cross-sectional baseline and nutrition intervention phases. There were 150 participants of age 6 to 12 years. They were randomly assigned to 3 groups, fish meal-vitamin C (n = 50), vitamin C (n = 50), and control (n = 50), and given different cowpea-based diets for a 6-month period. Height and weight measurements were done according to the standard procedures, dietary data were obtained by 24-hour recall and food frequency questionnaire, hemoglobin concentrations were determined by Hemocue Hemoglobinometer, and serum ferritin and complementreactive protein (CRP) were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Participants' blood samples were examined for malaria parasitemia and stools for helminthes using Giemsa stain and Kato-Katz techniques, respectively. Results: Mean ferritin concentration was not significantly different among groups. End line mean or change in hemoglobin concentrations between fish meal-vitamin C group (128.4 + 7.2/8.3 + 10.6 g/L) and control (123.1 ± 6.6/4.2 ± 10.4 g/L) were different, P
CITATION STYLE
Egbi, G., Ayi, I., Saalia, F. K., Zotor, F., Adom, T., Harrison, E., … Steiner-Asiedu, M. (2015). Impact of cowpea-based food containing fish meal served with Vitamin C-rich drink on iron stores and hemoglobin concentrations in Ghanaian schoolchildren in a Malaria endemic area. Food and Nutrition Bulletin, 36(3), 264–275. https://doi.org/10.1177/0379572115596253
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