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Published in: BMC Public Health 1/2019

Open Access 01-12-2019 | Research article

Home gardens as a predictor of enhanced dietary diversity and food security in rural Myanmar

Authors: Anu Rammohan, Bill Pritchard, Michael Dibley

Published in: BMC Public Health | Issue 1/2019

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Abstract

Background

Home gardens have been found to improve food security and dietary diversity in a wide range of settings. However, there is a need to place home gardens within the larger food and nutrition system landscapes that shape the construction of household diets. Myanmar offers a unique opportunity to study these research questions, given the decades of political isolation, high levels of food insecurity and poor nutrition levels.

Methods

The aim of our paper is to use household survey data from three distinctive agro-ecological settings in rural Myanmar to empirically analyse the role of home gardens in influencing household food insecurity and dietary diversity. Our analysis is based on unique survey data conducted in rural Myanmar. The sample includes 3230 rural households from three States/Districts (Magway, Ayeyarwady and Chin). Using information on two dimensions of food security, a series of variables capturing a household’s self-reported food security status and coping strategies when food is not available; and a measure of household’s dietary diversity based on 24-h recall data, we empirically estimate a household’s probability of being food insecure and the diversity of their diets.

Results

There are statistically significant associations between access to home gardens and measures of food security and improved dietary diversity. In particular, for landless households, the ownership of home gardens/ fruits and vines is statistically significant and is associated with a 6.6 percentage points lower probability of a household having to change their diet, and a 7.9 percentage points lower probability of being in hunger.

Conclusions

From a policy perspective, our results show that promoting home gardens among vulnerable households can improve food security and dietary diversity among vulnerable rural households in Myanmar.
Footnotes
1
Home gardens can also go by the names homestead garden, backyard garden, or kitchen garden. We treat these as synonymous. It also needs noting that our usage of the term ‘home gardens’ is different to that used in some African contexts where it denotes small-scale agroforestry and livestock practices at the village level.
 
2
Some of these studies focused only on Vitamin A-rich fruits and vegetables.
 
3
3 There are 29 studies in their meta-analysis, but four assessed the effects of livestock interventions only, and three assessed nutrition education only. Of the remaining 23 studies, all involved a home garden intervention, either singly or in combination with nutrition education or livestock.
 
4
This study includes reference to a total of 27 intervention studies, of which 11 specifically refer to home gardens.
 
5
‘Townships’ are the third tier of government administration in Myanmar, and outside of the larger cities they typically comprise a region characterized by a rural population dispersed in villages and hamlets and an adjacent service town.
 
6
Note that our survey question on home gardens did not explicitly ask whether output was for own-consumption or sale. However, a prior question in the survey asked respondents to list any crop, fruit or vegetable they produced for sale, so we can infer that all the data we collected on home garden foods were for own-consumption.
 
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Metadata
Title
Home gardens as a predictor of enhanced dietary diversity and food security in rural Myanmar
Authors
Anu Rammohan
Bill Pritchard
Michael Dibley
Publication date
01-12-2019
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Public Health / Issue 1/2019
Electronic ISSN: 1471-2458
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-019-7440-7

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