The Knowledge Hub brings together existing knowledge, guidance, tools, and other useful resources related to women’s nutrition, maternal nutrition, and evidence-based interventions targeting women, such as prenatal multiple micronutrient supplementation (MMS).
The Knowledge Hub is a dynamic, publicly accessible repository. It will be expanded and further improved over time, and we ask for your help in this. Please share any resources that you believe should be included in this Knowledge Hub, and send them to [email protected].
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Key scientific articles on evidence related to MMS.
MMS during pregnancy – Cochrane Review 2019
IPD Analysis on benefits of MMS – 2017
Maternal and Child Undernutrition Progress – The Lancet Series
Top policy briefs, case studies and guides for advocating for maternal nutrition and MMS.
Empowering Mothers: New Insights into Multiple Micronutrient Supplementation During Pregnancy
An enabling policy environment for multiple micronutrient supplementation: Lessons from Bangladesh
This presentation explains the recommendations by the World Health Organization for the use of multiple micronutrient supplements in the context of COVID -19.
This presentation is a dialogue between two experts in maternal nutrition about the science behind maternal nutrition and multiple micronutrient supplementation (MMS) during pregnancy. The video is taken from the Healthy Mothers Healthy Babies launch webinar, held on 10 March 2021.
This presentation provides an overview of the scientific evidence on multiple micronutrient supplements (MMS).
This brief provides interim programmatic guidance on actions to protect the diets and nutrition services and practices of pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers during the mitigation phase of the COVID-19 response. Disseminating this guidance and documenting emerging evidence and lessons learned will be key to implementing the most appropriate and effective responses in the face of this pandemic.
This is a comprehensive presentation on research studies on preconception care in Indonesia to improve maternal and newborn health with a special focus on the benefits of multiple micronutrient supplements (MMS) on maternal and newborn health outcomes compared to iron-folic acid (IFA).
The presentation provides a brief introduction to multiple micronutrient supplementation (MMS), its efficacy, use during COVID-19, and global commitments to scale up MMS.
This report presents cost-benefit analyses for two promising interventions within Malawi’s Ante-natal Care (ANC) system to improve maternal and newborn health. The first is BEmONC5, a compacted set of five specific interventions taken from within the conventional basic emergency obstetric and newborn care package and the second is multiple micronutrients supplementation (MMS). Additional interventions considered in the main analysis include the conventional 15-intervention package of basic emergency obstetric and newborn care (BEmONC) interventions and calcium supplementation in pregnancy, which were not found to be as cost-effective as the first two. According to this report, replacing the existing IFA supplements with MMS for pregnant women would lead to 1300 to 1600 averted stillbirths and neonatal deaths per year. Scaled up to full coverage across Malawi, this program would require an investment of MWK 1.5 – 2.5 billion (USD 2.0m – 3.4m) annually over the next 10 years.
In this study, villages in northwest China were randomized for all pregnant women to take either daily folic acid (control), iron with folic acid (IFA), or multiple micronutrient supplements (MMS) with a recommended allowance of 15 vitamins and minerals. Birth weight was 42 g higher in the MMS group compared with the folic acid group. IFA was associated with a significantly reduced risk of early preterm delivery. There was a significant increase in haemoglobin concentration in both IFA and MMS groups compared with folic acid alone. There were no significant differences for perinatal mortality, but IFA was associated with a significantly reduced early neonatal mortality by 54%.
This study assessed the effects of prenatal multiple micronutrient supplementation (MMS) and an early invitation to food supplementation on maternal hemoglobin level, birth weight, and infant mortality in Bangladesh. Pregnant women were randomized into 6 groups; iron-folic acid (IFA) with 30 mg of iron and 400 μg of folic acid, IFA with 60 mg of iron and 400 μg of folic acid, or MMS containing a daily allowance of 15 micronutrients, including 30 mg of iron and 400 μg of folic acid, combined with food supplementation (608 kcal 6 days per week) either by early invitation (9 weeks’ gestation) or usual invitation (20 weeks’ gestation). The early invitation with MMS group had an infant mortality rate of 16.8 per 1000 live births vs 44.1 per 1000 live births for usual invitation with IFA with 60 mg of iron and 400 μg of folic acid. Early invitation with MMS group had an under 5-year mortality rate of 18 per 1000 live births compared to 54 per 1000 live births for usual invitation with IFA with 60 mg of iron and 400 μg of folic acid. Usual invitation with MMS group had the highest incidence of spontaneous abortions and the highest infant mortality rate. Results showed that among pregnant women in poor communities in Bangladesh, treatment with multiple micronutrients, including IFA combined with early food supplementation, vs a standard program that included treatment with iron and folic acid and usual food supplementation, resulted in decreased childhood mortality.
This study was a randomized, double-blind clinical trial in semirural Mexico to compare the effects of multiple micronutrient supplements (MMS) with those of iron supplements during pregnancy on birth size. Pregnant women received supplements, 6 days a week at home, as well as routine antenatal care, until delivery. Both supplements contained Iron but the MMS group also received 1–1.5 times the recommended dietary allowances of several micronutrients. Both groups did not differ significantly in terms of the birth size of newborns. The results suggest that MMS during pregnancy does not lead to greater infant birth size than does iron-only supplementation.