Nutrition promotion and collective vegetable gardening by adolescent girls: Feasibility assessment from a pilot in Afghanistan
Abstract
This study aimed to assess the feasibility of collective vegetable gardening
into an existing development programme for adolescent girls as a means of
improving awareness about health and nutrition and increasing vegetable
consumption in Afghanistan. A one and half year pilot study tested the
feasibility of layering an intervention that combined agricultural training
and input support in Kabul, Parwan and Kapisa regions on an adolescent
programme implemented by a non-government organisation. The study
included 400 adolescent girls for survey and qualitative tools to understand
the local context of adolescent girls' participation in vegetable cultivation.
The assessment demonstrates the evidence that despite of the challenging
situation and traditional culture in Afghanistan the pilot had successfully
engaged almost all of the adolescent girls in collective vegetables
cultivation by making them aware about health, nutrition and the usefulness
of vegetables consumption while the bad effects of not intake those. And
the cultivation proved itself financially viable and very much effective for
the community though there were little challenges. The pilot would be
feasible and scalable to address the malnutrition and girls' marginalization
if those challenges were taken into consideration carefully.