Almost Random : Evaluating a Large-scale Randomized Nutrition Program in the Presence of Crossover

Large-scale randomized interventions have the potential to uncover the causal effect of programs applying to a large population, thereby improving on the insights gained from currently dominant smaller randomized studies. However, the external validity gained through larger interventions typically implies less supervision and often comes at the cost of some deviation from the randomization plan. This paper investigates the impact of the Nutrition Enhancement Program, which aims to improve child nutrition in Senegal based on a large-scale randomized community intervention. The analysis explicitly deals with deviation from the planned treatment and suggests approaches for combining ex-post adjustments such as propensity score matching with the randomized treatment plan. The authors do not detect a strong overall program impact on the outcome measure of weight-for-age based on planned treatment status, but do find an impact on the youngest children. Moreover, the project impact is clearer when the analysis considers treatment crossover using alternative estimators of two-stage least-squares and propensity score matching. The findings underscore the importance of addressing the shortcomings of large-scale randomization interventions in a systematic manner in order to understand the selection process that can guide further implementation of such projects, as well as to expose the true, causal effect of such programs.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Linnemayr, Sebastian, Alderman, Harold
Format: Policy Research Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2008-11
Subjects:MONITORING & EVALUATION TECHNIQUES; IMPACT EVALUATION; COMMUNITY NUTRITION INTERVENTIONS;, AGE GROUPS, AGED, ANEMIA, BIRTH WEIGHT, BREASTFEEDING, BREASTFEEDING PROMOTION, CHILD CARE, CHILD DEVELOPMENT, CHILD DISEASES, CHILD GROWTH, CHILD MALNUTRITION, CHILD MORTALITY, CHILD NUTRITION, CHILD NUTRITIONAL STATUS, COMMUNITIES, COMMUNITY HEALTH, DESCRIPTION, DEWORMING, DIARRHEA, DISCRIMINATION, DISEASE, DISEASE PREVALENCE, EARLY CHILD DEVELOPMENT, EARLY CHILDHOOD, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC POLICY, FEMALE, GENDER, GENDER BIAS, HEALTH CARE, HEALTH OUTCOMES, HEALTH PRODUCTION, HEALTH WORKERS, HOUSEHOLDS, HUMAN BIOLOGY, HUMAN CAPITAL, HUSBAND, INFANTS, INTERNATIONAL BANK, INTERVENTION, INTERVENTIONS, IRON, IRON SUPPLEMENTS, MALARIA, MALNUTRITION, MALNUTRITION RATES, MEDICINE, MORTALITY, NUTRITION, NUTRITION INTERVENTIONS, NUTRITION OUTCOMES, NUTRITIONAL STATUS, OLDER CHILDREN, ORAL REHYDRATION, PEDIATRICS, PHYSICAL ASSETS, PHYSICAL HEALTH, PREGNANCY, PREGNANT MOTHERS, PREGNANT WOMEN, PRESCHOOL CHILDREN, PREVALENCE, PROPHYLAXIS, PSYCHOLOGY, PUBLIC HEALTH, RECEIPT, SANITARY FACILITIES, SCHOLARSHIP, STUNTING, TREATMENT, UNDERNUTRITION, VILLAGE, VILLAGE LEVEL, VILLAGES, VITAMIN A, VITAMIN A DEFICIENCY, VITAMIN A SUPPLEMENTATION, VOUCHER, VOUCHERS, WORKERS MONITORING & EVALUATION TECHNIQUES; IMPACT EVALUATION; COMMUNITY NUTRITION INTERVENTIONS;,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/11/10087951/almost-random-evaluating-large-scale-randomized-nutrition-program-presence-crossover
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6293
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