The Egg Hub Model: A Sustainable and Replicable Approach to Address Food Security and Improve Livelihoods

IF 3.8 Q2 NUTRITION & DIETETICS Current Developments in Nutrition Pub Date : 2024-08-01 DOI:10.1016/j.cdnut.2024.103795
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Abstract

Background

Despite progress in improving living standards and reduced poverty, food insecurity and malnutrition remain a significant issue worldwide. Childhood is a critical time for the intake of protein to support physical and cognitive growth, including animal-source foods like eggs which can effectively mitigate stunting in low- and middle-income countries. In Malawi, high malnutrition rates among women and children represent a significant public health challenge, but high-quality sources such as eggs remain costly, scarce, and rarely consumed by children in Malawi. The Egg Hub model, identified and piloted by local agri-food entrepreneurs and the Sight and Life Foundation in Malawi, tackles the obstacles faced by smallholder farmers, working to increase egg production, enhance availability, and improve consumption within rural communities by supporting small-scale farmers transition from unsustainable and unproductive backyard rearing to small-scale farm through access to high-quality inputs, training, loans, and a guaranteed market for their eggs.

Objectives

This paper provides a detailed account of the implementation of the pilot of the Egg Hub Model in Malawi including the demand creation process, the impact of the model on producers, consumers, and operators, and the social, economic, and environmental sustainability aspects of the model.

Methods

Qualitative and quantitative surveys (n = 217 consumers) were used for demand creation and qualitative surveys were used with 15 retailers to determine egg sales. With 16 farmers and the egg hub operator, business metrics, including profits and loss records, were analyzed.

Results

The pilot of the Egg Hub model in Malawi supported 85 farmers to triple their egg production, allowing their communities to purchase eggs at prices reduced by 40%, benefiting an estimated number of 180,000 rural poor. Egg consumption among the target population increased from an average of 2 to 9 eggs/month and led to reduced egg wastage and better biosecurity, reducing the risk of children’s exposure to chicken feces and infections. The achievements of this Egg Hub in Malawi allowed the model to be replicated in Ethiopia, Peru, and Brazil, producing 40 million eggs annually and benefiting more than half a million consumers.

Conclusion

The Egg Hub model is a comprehensive and scalable solution to increase egg supply, address malnutrition and food insecurity, and improve livelihoods. The advantages include centralizing key activities through a community-centered approach, empowering female farmers, increasing access to a highly nutritious food, and economic benefits for farmers and their communities.

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鸡蛋中心模式:解决粮食安全问题和改善生计的可持续和可复制的方法
背景尽管在提高生活水平和减少贫困方面取得了进展,但粮食不安全和营养不良仍然是全世界的一个重大问题。儿童时期是摄入蛋白质以支持身体和认知能力成长的关键时期,包括鸡蛋在内的动物源性食品可以有效缓解中低收入国家的发育迟缓问题。在马拉维,妇女和儿童的高营养不良率是一项重大的公共卫生挑战,但鸡蛋等优质来源食品仍然昂贵、稀缺,马拉维儿童很少食用。由马拉维当地农业食品企业家和视力与生命基金会确定并试行的 "鸡蛋枢纽 "模式解决了小农面临的障碍,通过提供高质量的投入、培训、贷款和有保障的鸡蛋市场,支持小农从不可持续的、非生产性的后院饲养过渡到小规模农场,从而努力提高鸡蛋产量、增加鸡蛋供应和改善农村社区的鸡蛋消费。本文详细介绍了在马拉维实施鸡蛋集散中心模式试点的情况,包括需求创造过程,该模式对生产者、消费者和经营者的影响,以及该模式在社会、经济和环境方面的可持续性。结果在马拉维进行的鸡蛋中心模式试点支持 85 位农民将鸡蛋产量提高了两倍,使他们的社区能够以降低 40% 的价格购买鸡蛋,惠及约 180,000 名农村贫困人口。目标人群的鸡蛋消费量从平均每月 2 枚增加到 9 枚,减少了鸡蛋浪费,提高了生物安全水平,降低了儿童接触鸡粪便和感染疾病的风险。马拉维鸡蛋中心取得的成就使这一模式得以在埃塞俄比亚、秘鲁和巴西推广,每年生产 4000 万枚鸡蛋,惠及 50 多万消费者。其优势包括通过以社区为中心的方法集中关键活动,增强女性农民的能力,增加获得高营养食物的机会,以及为农民及其社区带来经济效益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Current Developments in Nutrition
Current Developments in Nutrition NUTRITION & DIETETICS-
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
4.20%
发文量
1327
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊最新文献
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