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© 2004 The American Society for Nutritional Sciences J. Nutr. 134:2336-2341, September 2004


Community and International Nutrition

Conditional Cash Transfers Are Associated with a Small Reduction in the Rate of Weight Gain of Preschool Children in Northeast Brazil1

Saul S. Morris2, Pedro Olinto*, Rafael Flores{dagger}, Eduardo A. F. Nilson** and Ana C. Figueiró**

Europe, Middle East and Americas Division, United Kingdom Department for International Development, London SW1E 5HE, UK; * Food Consumption and Nutrition Division, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC 20006; {dagger} Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322; and ** Ministry of Health, Brasília, DF, 70750–543, Brazil

2To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: s-morris{at}dfid.gov.uk.

Programs providing cash transfers to poor families, conditioned upon uptake of preventive health services, are common in Latin America. Because of the consistent association between undernutrition and poverty, and the role of health services in providing growth promotion, these programs are supposed to improve children’s growth. The impact of such a program was assessed in 4 municipalities in northeast Brazil by comparing 1387 children under 7 y of age from program beneficiary households with 502 matched nonbeneficiaries who were selected to receive the program but who subsequently were excluded as a result of quasi-random administrative errors. Anthropometric status was assessed 6 mo after benefits began to be distributed, and beneficiary children were 0.13 Z-scores lighter (weight-for-age) than excluded children, after adjusting for confounders (P = 0.024). The children’s growth trajectories were reconstructed by copying up to 10 recorded weights from their Ministry of Health growth monitoring cards and by relating each weight to the child’s age, gender, and duration of receipt of the program benefit in a random effects regression model. Totals of 472 beneficiary and 158 excluded children under 3 y of age were included in this analysis. Each additional month of exposure to the program was associated with a rate of weight gain 31 g lower than that observed in excluded children of the same age (P < 0.001). This failure to respond positively to the program may have been due to a perception that benefits would be discontinued if the child started to grow well. Nutrition programs should guard against giving the impression that poor growth will be rewarded.


KEY WORDS: • cash transfer programs • childhood growth • Latin America • Brazil • quasi-experiment




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