Pre-pregnancy iodized salt improved children's cognitive development in randomized trial in Ethiopia
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Maternal and Child Nutrition
Abstract
The overarching Ethiopia project examined the effects of early market introduction
of iodized salt on the growth and mental development of young children. Sixty districts
were randomly assigned to intervention (early market access to iodized salt) or
control (later access through market forces), and one community per district was randomly
chosen as the sampling unit. For this project, 22 of the districts were included.
The participants were 1,220 pregnant women who conceived after the intervention
began. When their children were 2 to 13 months old, field staff collected information
on household sociodemographic status and iodized salt intake, child stimulation,
maternal depression symptoms, children's diet, anthropometry, urinary iodine concentration
(UIC), hemoglobin, and mental development scores (Bayley III scales).
Fewer mothers prepartum (28% vs. 41%, p < .05) and their children (13% vs. 20%, p <
.05) were iodine deficient (UIC <50 μg/L) in the intervention compared with the control
group. The intervention children had higher cognitive scores (33.3 ± 0.3 vs. 32.6
± 0.3; Δ = 0.6; 95% CI [0.0, 1.3]; d = 0.17; p = .01; 4 IQ points) than their controls.
The other Bayley subscale scores did not differ from control children. The intervention
group had a higher child stimulation (22.7 ± 0.2 vs. 22.1 ± 0.2; Δ = 0.5; 95% CI
[0.02, 0.89]; d = 0.17; p = .01) but not growth indicators (weight-for-age z score,
length-for-age z score, and weight-for-length z score: −1.1 ± 0.1 vs. −1.1 ± 0.1, −1.7
± 0.1 vs. −1.7 ± 0.1; −0.2 ± 0.1 vs. −0.1 ± 0.1, respectively, all p > .05) compared with
their controls. Iodized salt intake improved iodine status of both pregnant women
and their children and also child cognitive development.
Description
Research Article
Citation
Mohammed H, Marquis GS, Aboud F, Bougma K, Samuel A. Pre-pregnancy iodized salt improved children's cognitive development in randomized trial in Ethiopia. Matern Child Nutr. 2020;e12943. https://doi.org/10. 1111/mcn.12943