Early Childhood Nutrition and Adult Outcomes in India
- Conditions
- Nonhealth Outcomes
- Interventions
- Dietary Supplement: Upma
- Registration Number
- NCT03207321
- Lead Sponsor
- University of Chicago
- Brief Summary
This study will investigate the association between exposure to a daily nutritional supplement in utero and during the first three years of life and adult educational, marriage, and labor market outcomes in India. During 1987-1990, a controlled nutrition trial offered a daily cooked meal to pregnant women and children below the age of six years in 15 intervention villages near the city of Hyderabad in South India. No supplementation was offered during the study in another 14 control villages. The trial and its follow up surveys are together known as the Andhra Pradesh Children and Parents Study (APCAPS).
This protocol registration is for an analysis of the publicly available APCAPS third follow up wave (2010-2012) data. It is not a registration of the underlying 1987-1990 nutrition trial.
- Detailed Description
The investigators plan to use the 2010-2012 wave of the APCAPS data. They will access these publicly available data by applying for collaboration with the APCAPS study group.
The 2010-2012 follow-up survey invited all surviving children born during the original trial period of 1987-1990 (hereafter called index children) to participate. These index children were 20-25 years old at the time of this survey. Of the invited index children, 1,360 (715 in intervention villages and 645 in control villages) participated. The APCAPS surveys have collected a wide variety of data on socio-demographics, lifestyle, medical history, mental and reproductive health, anthropometry, cardiovascular physiology, spirometry, and biomarkers.
Using these data, the investigators will examine the association between birth in an intervention village and adult educational, marriage and labor market outcomes. For each study participant, a survey question collected information on the highest level of education attained by the participant (self-reported). From this variable, the investigators will create two indicators of whether the adult: (1) completed at least secondary school, i.e. class X/XII, intermediate, vocational course, or equivalent; (2) completed at least graduate level, i.e. Bachelor's degree, diploma, or equivalent.
The third outcome variable of the analysis will be whether the adult was ever-married (currently married, widowed, or divorced) at the time of the survey. Finally, the investigators will also examine whether the adult was either employed in paid or unpaid (e.g. household agriculture) work, or enrolled in higher education (degree or training course).
The investigators will use at least two different analytical methods. First, they will conduct a multivariate regression analysis (logit or probit) of each of the four outcome indicators. Along with the main independent variable of interest - birth in an intervention village - the model will include the following covariates: age, sex (whether female), and birth order of the index child, indicators of parental schooling attainment, religion, caste, and household standard of living as measured by quintiles of a composite asset index. All standard errors of regression will be heteoskedasticity-robust and clustered at the village level. The analysis will be conducted (and results reported) for the full sample and separately for the male and female subsamples.
In order to mitigate any bias arising from systematic differences in the characteristics of the intervention and control village adults (e.g. due to non-random attrition or other reasons), the investigators will also use quasi-experimental matching methods. One widely used methodology is matching based on propensity scores. The investigators will first conduct a selection analysis in which the likelihood of birth in an intervention village is regressed (probit or logit model) on the set of participant, parental, and household covariates mentioned above. Then, based on the predicted probability of intervention assignment (called propensity score) obtained from this model, participants in the intervention group will be matched with similar participant(s) in the control group. The investigators will use a variety of matching algorithms in order to test the sensitivity of the results, e.g. one-to-one nearest neighbor, Kernel, and multiple nearest neighbors matching. Common metrics for the quality of matching exercise and covariate balancing tests will be reported.
After matching, the investigators will report the average difference in outcome indicators between the intervention and matched control groups (technically named as the average treatment effect on the treated) as the estimated association between birth in an intervention village and adult outcomes. Findings from the full sample as well as male and female subsamples will be reported.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 1360
- All participants in the publicly available data from the APCAPS 2010-2012 survey round.
- None
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Intervention Upma In 15 intervention villages, a balanced protein-calorie supplement - made from locally available corn-soya ingredients and called 'upma' - was offered daily to pregnant women and children under six years of age during 1987-1990. The meal provided on average 500 kcal energy and 20-25g of protein to women and half of those amounts to children.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method The likelihood of a study participant completing at least graduate level education, i.e. Bachelor's degree, diploma, or equivalent Up to 25 years Binary indicator of graduate level education
The likelihood of a study participant being employed in paid or unpaid work, or enrolled in further education (degree or training courses) Up to 25 years Binary indicator of employment or higher education enrollment
The likelihood of a study participant completing at least secondary school, i.e. class X/XII, intermediate, vocational course, or equivalent Up to 25 years Binary indicator of secondary level education
The likelihood of a study participant being ever-married (currently married, widowed, or divorced) Up to 25 years Binary indicator of marriage
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method