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Milk-and-Dairy-Products-in-Human-Nutrition-FAO

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Table 7.1 (cont<strong>in</strong>ued)<br />

Country/organization<br />

Title (duration)<br />

Reference<br />

Target<br />

population<br />

Goal/ objective<br />

Intervention:<br />

strategy <strong>and</strong> activities<br />

Design:<br />

comparison groups<br />

<strong>and</strong> methods<br />

Level of Inference<br />

Results<br />

300<br />

Ethiopia/Ethiopian<br />

Agricultural Research<br />

Organization &<br />

International Livestock<br />

Research Institute (ILRI)<br />

<strong>Dairy</strong> technology<br />

project (1995–1996)<br />

Ahmed, Jabbar<br />

<strong>and</strong> Ehui (2000)<br />

Farm<br />

households<br />

Improve<br />

household <strong>in</strong>come<br />

<strong>and</strong> nutrition<br />

*Cross-bred cows were<br />

<strong>in</strong>troduced for milk<br />

production <strong>and</strong> traction<br />

*Feed<strong>in</strong>g <strong>and</strong><br />

dairy management<br />

technologies <strong>in</strong>troduced<br />

A longitud<strong>in</strong>al design was<br />

used to collect data monthly<br />

from 84 households <strong>in</strong> 1997<br />

Group 1: participat<strong>in</strong>g<br />

households with cross-bred<br />

cows<br />

Group 2: control group us<strong>in</strong>g<br />

traditional practices matched<br />

by wealth groups<br />

Total n=84<br />

Plausibility<br />

*Increase <strong>in</strong> household <strong>in</strong>come<br />

associated with dairy technologies<br />

(p

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