Corrigendum: Multisectoral community development in Nepal has greater effects on child growth and diet than nutrition education alone (Public Health Nutrition (2019) (146-161) DOI: 10.1017/S136898001900260X)

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Abstract

Original text and correction: In Tables 3 and 4, the authors incorrectly included the z statistic in the columns marked 'SE'; this is corrected below. ORIGINAL TEXT (page 9, Results) Table 3 Mixed-effect linear regression showing coefficient (β) and SE for anthropometric measurements, household wealth score and total soap use (hygiene measure). Results are shown by survey round, treatment group and groupby-round interaction as a fixed effect adjusted for child factors (age, gender, baseline anthropometry) and household factors (household animal and wealth score, land ownership, household per capita income, mother's educational attainment) (Table Presented). CORRECTION Table 3 Mixed-effect linear regression showing coefficient (β) and SE for anthropometric measurements, household wealth score and total soap use (hygiene measure). Results are shown by survey round, treatment group and group-by-round interaction as a fixed effect adjusted for child factors (age, gender, baseline anthropometry) and household factors (household animal and wealth score, land ownership, household per capita income, mother's educational attainment) (Table Presented). ORIGINAL TEXT (page 10, Results) Table 4 Mixed-effect Poisson regression showing relative risk (RR) and SE for the number of food groups and number of animal-source foods (ASF) consumed by children in the project areas. The model was adjusted for child factors (age, gender, baseline anthropometry, baseline dietary intake) and household factors (household animal and wealth score, land ownership, household per capita income, mother's educational attainment) (Table Presented). CORRECTION Table 4 Mixed-effect Poisson regression showing relative risk (RR) and SE for the number of food groups and number of animal-source foods (ASF) consumed by children in the project areas. The model was adjusted for child factors (age, gender, baseline anthropometry, baseline dietary intake) and household factors (household animal and wealth score, land ownership, household per capita income, mother's educational attainment) (Table Presented).

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Miller, L. C., Neupane, S., Joshi, N., Lohani, M., Rogers, B. L., Neupane, S., … Webb, P. (2020, January 1). Corrigendum: Multisectoral community development in Nepal has greater effects on child growth and diet than nutrition education alone (Public Health Nutrition (2019) (146-161) DOI: 10.1017/S136898001900260X). Public Health Nutrition. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980019004944

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