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. 2021 Jul 9;17(Suppl 1):e13158. doi: 10.1111/mcn.13158

TABLE 2.

Descriptions of interventions to engage fathers, grandmothers and other family members

Author, country Study design Participants (n) Intervention components Theory Formative research Main topics
Maternal nutrition interventions
(A. Alam, Chowdhury, et al., 2020; Chowdhury et al., 2017) Bangladesh Qualitative: IDI, FGD, KII, observations

M: 16 IDI; 4 FGDs

F: 1 FGD

Gm: 1 FGD

Home visits during pregnancy, husbands, mothers, mothers‐in‐law were invited. Families were reached together Yes Maternal nutrition (balanced plate)
(M. Alam, Banwell, & Lokuge, 2020) Bangladesh Cross‐sectional survey M: 459 mHealth text messages to pregnant women and new mothers and their families. Families reached separately and together. Yes (Rajan et al., 2013) Safe pregnancy, planning for delivery, maternal nutrition, WASH
(Doyle et al., 2014; Doyle et al., 2018) Rwanda RCT qualitative: FGDs

F: 1195

n/a

Community groups for fathers; mothers invited to some. Fathers reached separately and as a couple. Yes Gender norms, couple communication, decision making, maternal and child health, childcare, parenting, violence
(Martin et al., 2018; Martin, Omotayo, Pelto, et al., 2017) Kenya

Secondary analysis C‐RCT

Qualitative: IDI

M: 1036

M: 32

F: 13

Gm: 7

Facility‐based individual counselling during antenatal care.

Family members reached through women.

Social support theoretical constructs Yes (Martin, Omotayo, Chapleau, et al., 2017) Calcium and iron‐folic acid supplementation, adherence, social support
(Nguyen et al., 2018) Bangladesh Secondary & path analysis of C‐RCT; cross‐sectional

M: 2000

F: 1307

Home visits, community groups (fathers forums), community mobilization. Couples reached together (counselling and community events) and separately (husband forum). Theory of reasoned action Yes Diet quality and quantity, IFA and calcium supplements, optimal weight‐gain, rest, father and family member support for maternal nutrition
(Surtimanah et al., 2019) Indonesia Quasi‐experimental M: 60 Facility‐based group sessions for pregnant women and husbands or other family member. Families reached together. Iron supplementation during pregnancy
Breastfeeding interventions
Fathers
(Ajike et al., 2020) Nigeria Quasi‐experimental F:50 Community group for expectant fathers. Fathers reached separately. Theory of planned behaviour EBF, EBF support skills, connections to holy writings
(Bich et al., 2014; Bich et al., 2016; Bich & Nguyen Manh, 2017) Viet Nam Quasi‐experimental

M: 469

F: 239

Home visits, community groups for fathers, mass media (radio). Fathers reached separately. BF initiation, EBF, maternal nutrition, father support
(Bich et al., 2019; Rempel et al., 2020) Viet Nam Quasi‐experimental

M: 761

F: 396

Home visits, community groups for fathers, community mobilization. Couples participated for 1y. Fathers reached separately. Theory of planned behaviour BF initiation, EBF, maternal nutrition, father support,
(Daniele et al., 2018) Burkina Faso RCT M: 1101 Facility‐based individual and group counselling for couples during antenatal and postnatal care. Couples reached together. EBF, family planning
(Dehcheshmeh et al., 2014) Iran RCT M: 58 Facility‐based group educational sessions. Couples reached together. Health during pregnancy, maternal diet, BF initiation
(Haider & Thorley, 2019) Bangladesh Longitudinal prospective study with interviews

M: 304

M: 48

Home visits by peer counsellors; and community group meetings with husbands, teachers, community leaders. Fathers reached separately. Early initiation EBF, BF techniques, maternity care, IFA supplementation
(Jones et al., 2018) South Africa 2‐phase RCT M: 836 Facility‐based individual counselling. Couples reached either together or separately. PMTCT, stigma, disclosure; partner communication; violence; family planning; EBF, CF
(Krakowiak et al., 2016) Kenya RCT: 2 arms

M: 502

F: 487

Home visits couples counselling during pregnancy and postpartum. Couples reached together. HIV testing; EBF; family planning
(Özlüses & Çelebioglu, 2014) Turkey Quasi‐experimental M: 117 Facility‐based individual counselling couples reached separately. BF
(Rabiepoor et al., 2019) Iran RCT

M: 33

F: 33

Facility‐based group training sessions; educational materials, telephone counselling service. Couples reached together. Social cognitive theory BF benefits, techniques, and continuation
(Raeisi et al., 2014) Iran RCT

M: 100

F: 100

Facility‐based group training sessions for fathers during pregnancy. Couples reached separately. Father support, BF
(Sahip & Turan, 2007) Turkey

Quasi‐experimental

Qualitative: FGD

F: 160

M: 19

Worksite sessions for expectant fathers. Fathers reached separately. Maternal nutrition, infant feeding, EBF, health seeking, fatherhood, communication
(Su & Ouyang, 2016) China Quasi‐experimental M: 72 Facility‐based group sessions for couples during pregnancy and 6 m postpartum. Couples reached together. BF; father involvement in decision‐making, BF support
(Susin et al., 1999; Susin & Giugliani, 2008) Brazil Quasi‐experimental

M: 547

F: 547

Facility‐based group postnatal counselling with video, pamphlets, and discussion. Couples reached together. EBF, management of common BF problems, father support
(Turan et al., 2001) Turkey RCT

M: 279

F: 253

Facility‐based group couple education sessions, print material, and telephone counselling service during pregnancy and postpartum. Couples reached together. Yes Healthy pregnancy, safe birth, infant care and feeding, women's health
(Turan et al., 2001) Turkey Community‐based effectiveness trial

M: 142

F: 43

Community‐based group educational programme for pregnant mothers with separate group educational programme for fathers. Fathers reached separately. Yes Healthy pregnancy, safe birth, infant care and feeding, women's health, support, communication
Grandmothers
(Bang et al., 2005) India Quasi‐experimental M: 913 Home visits by CHWs and community group meetings for pregnant women and grandmothers. Families reached together. Yes Nutrition during pregnancy, delivery, BF, neonatal care
(Bica & Giugliani, 2014; DeOliveira et al., 2012; DeOliveira et al., 2014; Nunes et al., 2011) Brazil RCT

M: 323

Gm: 169

Facility‐based individual counselling for adolescent mothers and grandmothers (separately); home visits counselling together; information booklet. Mothers and grandmothers reached separately and together. EBF/BF importance, duration, and technique; avoidance of early introduction of food and liquids
(Bootsri & Taneepanichskul, 2017) Thailand Quasi‐experimental

M: 84

Gm: 84

Facility‐based group training for mothers of pregnant adolescents (grandmothers) during pregnancy and postpartum. Grandmothers reached separately. Experiential learning, empowerment, social support Benefits breastfeeding, positioning and attachment, grandmothers' role
(Gharaei et al., 2020) Iran Quasi‐experimental M: 64

Facility‐based group education sessions for mothers and grandmothers during pregnancy and before discharge.

Mothers and grandmothers reached together

EBF, support for breastfeeding mother
Fathers and/or grandmothers or other family members
(Akbarzadeh et al., 2015) Iran Quasi‐experimental

M: 100

F: 19

Gm: 35

Facility‐based group educational sessions with print materials and videos. Family members reached separately. Beliefs, Attitudes, Subjective Norms and Enabling Factors (BASNEF) model. BF benefits for children and mothers, milk sufficiency, pumping, infant growth and development
(Andreson et al., 2013; Reimers et al., 2018) South Africa

Qualitative pilot study

Cluster‐RCT

M: 12

F: 3

Gm: 2

O: 9

M: 550

Buddies: 273

Facility‐based individual counselling for women and ‘infant feeding buddy’ during antenatal and postnatal visits. Mothers and buddies reached together.

Facility‐based individual counselling for women and ‘infant feeding buddy’ during antenatal and postnatal visits. Mothers and buddies reached together.

Informed by pilot

PMTCT, EBF, formula feeding

PMTCT, pregnancy, safe motherhood, EBF, CF, disclosure, adherence

(Gu et al., 2016) China RCT M: 285 Facility‐based individual and facility‐based group counselling sessions for women with husband or grandmother, with postnatal telephone counselling. Families reached together. Theory of planned behaviour EBF benefits, EBF techniques/problems
(Heidari et al., 2016; Kohan et al., 2019) Iran RCT M: 70 Facility‐based group education sessions with mothers and fathers/key family members during pregnancy and postpartum. Postpartum telephone counselling. Families reached together. Yes Benefits BF, BF techniques, BF problems treatment; expressing milk, nutrition during BF, family support
(Ke et al., 2018) China Quasi‐experimental M: 59 Home visits when father or grandmother present, telephone calls or text messages during pregnancy and postpartum. Families reached together. Detailed BF messages and support at key time points
(Namale‐Matovu et al., 2018) Uganda RCT M: 218 Facility‐based group sessions during pregnancy and postpartum. Families reached together. EBF, BF, maternal nutrition, complementary feeding, food safety
(Smittenaar et al., 2020) India

M: 5,469

F: 3,064

G: 3,626

Home visits conducted by ASHAs (CHWs), community mobilization through village health and nutrition events. Families reached together. Maternal and newborn health, early initiation, EBF
Whole community
(Cresswell et al., 2019) Burkina Faso Repeated cross‐sectional C‐RCT M: 2253 Community mobilization included community events and facilitated group discussions for fathers and family members in public places (Alive & Thrive). Families reached together. Early initiation, colostrum, avoiding water other liquids, EBF
(Harding et al., 2020) Ghana Cross‐sectional

Female: 280

Male: 171

mHealth Breastfeed4Ghana was a social media (Facebook and twitter) campaign with videos and a website. Family members reached individually or together. Socioecological model Message and material pretesting EBF
(Horii et al., 2016) Niger Cross‐sectional survey M: 2091 Facility‐based individual counselling, home visits, mass media. Families reached together (mass media) and separately (counselling and peer education). EBF, complementary feeding
(Jenkins et al., 2012) Zimbabwe Cross‐sectional survey

M: 234

F: 228

Community mobilization social marketing activities included road shows with music, drama, dancing, and mass media materials. Reached whole community. Yes EBF, expressing and heat treating breast milk
(Susiloretni et al., 2013; Susiloretni et al., 2015) Indonesia Quasi‐experimental

M: 163

F: 163

Gm: 163

O: 110

Community group trainings for families (mothers, fathers, grandmothers); mass media posters, banners, brochures. Families reached together. Socioecological orientation EBF
Complementary feeding interventions
(Abiyu & Belachew, 2020a, 2020b) Ethiopia C‐RCT M: 612 Home visits from women development Army volunteers with mothers, fathers, and grandmothers. Families reached together Complementary feeding; support to mothers
(Betancourt et al., 2020) Rwanda Quasi‐experimental pilot

M: 19

F: 10

Gm: 2

Home visits conducted by ‘coaches’ (university graduate students). Families reached together. Child development, nutrition, hygiene, responsive parenting
(Dinga et al., 2018) Kenya

RCT

FGD

M: 290

F: 290

n/a

Facility‐based individual sessions for fathers and mothers. Provided pamphlet summarizing key messages. Couples reached together. BF benefits; diet diversity; food prep; responsive feeding; father participation
(Martin et al., 2015; Mukuria et al., 2016; Thuita et al., under review) Kenya

Quasi‐experimental

Qualitative: IDI;FGD

M: 217

F: 138

Gm: 154

F:7; 8

Gm: 10; 10

Community‐based group peer education sessions for father groups and grandmother groups; community mobilization (family bazaars; fathers days at clinics). Family members reached separately and together. Socioecological model Yes (Thuita et al., 2015) Maternal nutrition and rest, EBF, CF, child health, HIV and IYCF, gender roles, family communication
(Roy et al., 2007) Bangladesh

C‐RCT

Qualitative: FGD

M: 576 Community mobilization activities for fathers, grandmothers, and other family members. Family members reached separately. Yes CF, child health, child interaction
(Singla et al., 2015) Uganda C‐RCT M: 319 Home visits to mothers and fathers. Mothers and fathers reached together and separately. Social cognitive theory Yes Diet diversity, child care and diet, maternal wellbeing, father involvement
Interventions for multiple nutrition behaviours
(Afsana et al., 2014) Bangladesh Implement‐ation research n/a Community mobilization activities to promote micronutrient powders and infant feeding among family members and others. Families reached together. Micronutrient supplementation, EBF, CF
(Aidam et al., 2020) Sierra Leone Quasi‐experimental

M: 392

G: 219

Community‐based group dialogue sessions with grandmothers and intergenerational dialogue forums; community mobilization days of praise for grandmothers. Family members reached together and separately. Family systems theory, community empowerment Yes (MacDonald et al., 2020) Grandmothers' roles, maternal nutrition, EBF, CF
(Aubel et al., 2004) Senegal

Quasi‐ experimental

Qualitative: FGDs

WRA: 200

Gm: 150

Community‐based group participatory nutrition education sessions for grandmothers mothers and grandmothers reached separately. Transcultural approach to nutrition education; empowerment education, social network, self‐efficacy Yes Maternal nutrition, EBF, CF
(Bezner Kerr et al., 2019) Malawi Pre‐post longitudinal study; qualitative

M: 352

IDI: 90

FGD: 29

Community‐based group education meetings on agriculture and nutrition included discussions and community‐based dialogue. Families reached together. Farming practices, food security and dietary diversity, gender
(Bezner Kerr et al., 2011; Satzinger et al., 2009) Malawi

Quasi‐ experimental

Qualitative: IDI

Families: 160

M: 18

F: 17

Community‐based groups discussed agriculture and nutrition with mothers, fathers, grandmothers, and other family members. Families reached both together and separately. Yes IYCF, sharing household resources, gender norms
(Brasington et al., 2016) Egypt Quasi‐experimental M: 3445 Community‐based group counselling by CHWs for pregnant women, grandmothers, and fathers. Family members reached separately. Similar to a socioecological framework Birth preparedness, BF, food selection, and growth monitoring
(Downs et al., 2019) Senegal

Pre/post

Qualitative: FGDs

M: 47

F: 47

M: 24

F: 2

mHealth voice messaging intervention sent to mothers and fathers of children 6–23 m. mothers and fathers reached separately. Theory of planned behaviour Yes Continued BF, diet diversity, consistency of porridge, handwashing
(DeLorme et al., 2018; Fiorella et al., 2019) Kenya Quasi‐experimental FGD

Community members: 192

CHWs: 86

M: 28

F: 7

Community‐based group facilitated by CHWs to engage social support networks, including fathers, grandparents, and other community members. Families reached together. Constructs related to social networks/social support IYCF, social support, family planning, safe pregnancy, food security
(Flax et al., 2019) Malawi

Qualitative: IDI

Process data

M:18

F: 7

Community‐based group intervention for HIV positive women incorporated into village savings and loans association meetings; fathers invited to some sessions. Mothers and fathers reached together. Yes Early initiation of BF, EBF, breastfeeding on demand, continued BF, CF, food hygiene, and feeding during illness
(Hoddinott et al., 2018) Bangladesh C‐RCT M: 2,341 Community‐based group nutrition behaviour change sessions led by CHWs, husbands and mothers‐in‐law invited to certain sessions. Included monthly cash transfer and/or food rations made to mothers. Families reached together. Theory of reasoned action; socio‐ecological model Yes BF; CF; diet diversity; micronutrients; WASH, diarrhoea; maternal nutrition; homestead food production; women's status, family relationships
(Knight et al., 1990) Jamaica Quasi‐experimental

M: 126

C: 622

Child‐to‐child programme delivered by teachers to schoolchildren who were encouraged to share with their parents. Children reached separately. IYCF, WASH, early child development, child growth
(Kumar et al., 2015; Kumar et al., 2018; Rosenberg et al., 2018) Zambia Pre/post repeated cross‐sectional M: 6580 Community‐based groups led by female smallholder model farmers fathers invited to attend; community mobilization (drama), mass media (print, radio). Fathers and mothers reached together. Similar to a socioecological framework IYCF, WASH, crop diversity, gender equity, women's empowerment
(S. S. Kim, Nguyen, et al., 2018; S. S. Kim, Roopnaraine, et al., 2018; Menon et al., 2016; Nguyen et al., 2019; Sanghvi et al., 2013) Bangladesh Cluster randomized, impact evaluation design

M: 4200 (endline)

M: 2400 (2 y follow up)

Home visits from nutrition focused front line health workers and volunteers, community mobilization (theatre), and mass media (television) to engage other family members. Families reached together. Stages of change, diffusion of innovations, and elements of theory of planned behaviour and social cognitive theory Yes EBF, CF
(Matare et al., 2019; Martin et al., 2021) Tanzania Qualitative: Interviews and FGDs

EBF/CF

M: 36/50

F: 30/40

Home visits (during household trials) with counselling for mothers and fathers. Couples reached separately. EBF, CF, dietary diversity
(Salasibew et al., 2019) Ethiopia Qualitative: FGDs and observations

M: 54

F: 54

Home visits by health and agriculture extension workers and community‐based group meetings with programme households. Implemented for 3y. Mothers and fathers reached together. Trans‐theoretical model (stages of change) EBF, CF, dietary diversity
(Selassie & Fantahun, 2011) Ethiopia Cross‐sectional survey M/CG: 800 Home visits by CHWs trained on integrated Management of Neonatal and Childhood Illness. Families reached together. BF initiation, prelacteal feeding, CF, vitamin A supplementation
(Sloand et al., 2010) Haiti Quasi‐experimental C = 559 Community‐based group fathers' clubs held health education sessions (e.g. discussions, songs, skits). Fathers reached separately. EBF, child nutrition, immunization, feeding during illness, supporting wives
(Tall et al., 2018) Senegal Qualitative: FGDs, IDI 10 FGDs Community‐based groups included grandmother groups, pregnant Women's solidarity circles, future father groups. Family members reached separately. Maternal and neonatal health, IFA supplementation, breastfeeding
(Cunningham et al., 2021) Nepal Cross‐sectional monitoring data

2017/2019

M:1850/1827

F:938/942

Home visits by frontline workers to all family members; community mobilization (food and handwashing demonstrations); mass media edutainment radio programme. Families reached together. Yes Maternal, newborn, and child nutrition

A sub‐sample of these interventions have also been presented in a mixed methods systematic review (Martin et al., 2020). Abbreviations: ANC, Antenatal care; BF, Breastfeeding; BRAC, an international development organization based in Bangladesh; EBF, Exclusive breastfeeding; C, children; CF, complementary feeding; CG, caregiver; CHW, community health workers and is used to denote village health worker, community resource person, community health volunteer; C‐RCT, cluster randomized control trial; F, Fathers; FGD, focus group discussion; Gm, Grandmothers; IDI, In‐depth Interview; IFA, Iron Folic Acid supplements; IYCF, infant and young child feeding; M, mothers; O, others; PMTCT, prevention of mother‐to‐child transmission; RCT, randomized control trial; WASH, water, sanitation, and hygiene; WRA, women of reproductive age.