A systematic review of adaptations and effectiveness of scaled-up nutrition interventions

Author:

Sutherland Rachel L1,Jackson Jacklyn K1ORCID,Lane Cassandra1,McCrabb Sam1ORCID,Nathan Nicole K1,Yoong Sze Lin1,Lum Melanie1,Byaruhanga Judith1,McLaughlin Matthew1,Brown Alison1,Milat Andrew J1,Bauman, and Adrian E1,Wolfenden Luke1

Affiliation:

1. R.L. Sutherland, J.K. Jackson, C. Lane, S. McCrabb, N.K. Nathan, S.L. Yoong, M. Lum, J. Byaruhanga, M. McLaughlin, A. Brown, A.E. Bauman, and L. Wolfenden are with the School of Medicine and Public Health, Faculty of Health and Medicine, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, New South Wales, Australia. R.L. Sutherland, J.K. Jackson, C. Lane, S. McCrabb, N.K. Nathan, S.L. Yoong, M. Lum, J. Byaruhang

Abstract

Abstract Context Public health nutrition interventions shown to be effective under optimal research conditions need to be scaled up and implemented in real-world settings. Objectives The primary aim for this review was to assess the effectiveness of scaled-up public health nutrition interventions with proven efficacy, as examined in a randomized controlled trial. Secondary objectives were to: 1) determine if the effect size of scaled-up interventions were comparable to the prescale effect, and; 2) identify any adaptations made during the scale-up process. Data sources Six electronic databases were searched and field experts contacted. Study selection An intervention was considered scaled up if it was delivered on a larger scale than a preceding randomized controlled trial (“prescale”) in which a significant intervention effect (P ≤ 0.05) was reported on a measure of nutrition. Data extraction Two reviewers independently performed screening and data extraction. Effect size differences between prescale and scaled-up interventions were quantified. Adaptations to scale-up studies were coded according to the Adaptome model. Results Ten scaled-up nutrition interventions were identified. The effect size difference between prescale trials and scaled-up studies ranged from –32.2% to 222% (median, 50%). All studies made adaptations between prescale to scaled-up interventions. Conclusion The effects of nutrition interventions implemented at scale typically were half that achieved in prior efficacy trials. Identifying effective scale-up strategies and methods to support retainment of the original prescale effect size is urgently needed to inform public health policy. Systematic Review Registration PROSPERO registration no.CRD42020149267.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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