Masters Dissertation
Agricultural diversification is among tools used for improvement of economy food
security and nutritional status at household level. However, there have been few studies on
the contribution of agricultural diversification on diets and nutrition of children and
women in rural Tanzania. Therefore this study was carried to examine the influence of
agricultural diversification on dietary diversity and nutrition of children aged six to 23
months and their mothers in four agro-ecological zones in Kagera region. The specific
objectives included: to (i) assess extent and practices in agricultural diversification in four
agro-ecological zones (ii) assess gender dimensions in labour for agricultural production
diversity and its implication on women’s time and workload (iii) assess household food
security, dietary diversity and food consumption pattern of women and their children (iv)
evaluate nutritional and health status of children and their mothers (v) examine factors
influencing child and mother dietary diversity and nutritional status. A cross-sectional
study design was used to collect data from 398 households which were child-mother pairs.
Descriptive analysis, indices and counts on agricultural diversification, HFIAS, DDS and
anthropometric measurements were performed. The results indicated the overall
agricultural diversification, according to Margalef index factored with kept livestock was
39.60%. The women played both productive and reproductive roles. Mean HFIAS score
was 5.49 ± 4.71 (range: 0 – 21) while DDS for children and mothers were 2.48 ± 1.4 and
4.25 ± 1.29 respectively. The 9.8% of mothers were underweight, 13.1% were overweight
and 3.3% were obese. The overall average score of WAZ, LAZ and WLZ was -0.5975 ±
1.3125, 1.0835 ± 1.9248 and -0.0348 ± 1.2899 respectively. The agricultural
diversification should be improved to include more food groups with proper nutritional
education programmes and consideration of women work load.
Government of Ireland (Irish Aid Scholarship)