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. 2019 Aug 27;16(8):e1002892. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002892

Table 5. Effect of intervention on AM outcomes assessed by cross-sectional study.

Baseline Endline
Comparison Intervention Comparison Intervention Δ 95% CI p-Value
n = 1,148 n = 1,153 n = 1,159 n = 1,154
AM prevalence (primary outcome) 172 (15%) 188 (16%) 169 (15%) 156 (14%) −1.31a (−4.2, 1.6) 0.37*
MAM prevalence 141 (12%) 155 (13%) 128 (11%) 123 (11%) −0.43a (−3.0, 2.1) 0.75
SAM prevalence 31 (2.7%) 33 (2.9%) 41 (3.5%) 33 (2.9%) −0.79a (−2.3, 0.76) 0.30
WLZ −0.78 ± 1.00 −0.74 ± 1.00 −0.73 ± 1.01 −0.61 ± 0.98 0.10b (0.01, 0.20) 0.034
MUAC, mm 138 ± 11 138 ± 11 137 ± 11 138 ± 11 0.92b (−0.18, 2.02) 0.10

Data are n(%) or mean ± SD. AM, acute malnutrition; CI, confidence interval; ICC, intracluster correlation coefficient; MAM, moderate acute malnutrition; MUAC, mid-upper arm circumference; SAM, severe acute malnutrition; WLZ, weight-for-length Z-score.

*Not statistically significant after correcting for multiple testing of primary outcomes, using a pcritical = 0.025 calculated using the Benjamini–Hochberg method. ICC for primary outcomes are presented in S2 Table.

aDifference between intervention and comparison arm expressed in percentage points analyzed using a mixed-effect linear probability model with health center as random effect and sampling strata, health district, child sex, child age and whether the child was the first liveborn, the cluster means of the outcome at baseline, and intervention as fixed effects.

bDifference between intervention and comparison analyzed using a linear mixed- model with health center as random effect and sampling strata, health district, child sex, child age, whether the child was the first liveborn, cluster means of the outcome at baseline, and intervention as fixed effects.