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NEON

NURTURE EARLY FOR

OPTIMAL NUTRITION

NEON Conference

NEON

Partners

NEON

Funders

Programme
Overview

The first phase (formative research and intervention development in British Bangladeshis) was funded by the National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) North Thames (£301,693) in partnership with the London Borough of Tower Hamlets.

 

The current second phase (pilot feasibility randomised controlled trial and intervention development in all South Asians) is funded by the NIHR Academy (£805,854) in partnership with the Tower Hamlets GP Care Group CIC and the London Boroughs of Tower Hamlets and Newham.

 

If successful, a cluster randomised controlled trial will follow in East London with subsequent scale-up across the UK.

 

A detailed 2-page summary is available here.

Click here for NEON Partners and Funders.

Why is this
Important?

There is increasing recognition of the importance of the first 1000 days of life to child growth and development for the prevention of under and overnutrition, both in childhood as well as in later adult life. Sub-optimal feeding, care, and dental hygiene practices within this period increase the risk of nutrition-related diseases across the life course such as dental caries, type 2 diabetes, and coronary heart disease alongside worse intellectual development.

NEON
Toolkits

NEON Toolkits have developed over a time collaboratively between researchers, community facilitators, and the target population.

Our co-developed packages are available below.

NEON barrier picture cards.pdf

NEON Facilitation Manual.pdf

NEON list of resources tool.pdf

NEON Recipe Book final version.pdf

NEON Recommended Feeding and Care Practices - Picture Cards.pdf

Research
Methodology

THE PLA APPROACH

The PLA group approach used by the NEON programme has been widely documented as a low-cost, culturally adaptable, and effective method to achieve improvements in maternal and infant survival. It is being reverse innovated to the UK from developing countries for the first time. 

PLA groups have been recommended by the World Health Organisation and have demonstrated:

  • Reduction in maternal and new-born deaths (49% reduction in maternal mortality and 33% reduction in neonatal mortality)

  • The ability to address social determinants of health 

  • Adaptability to different cultural and country contexts (India, Malawi, Bangladesh, Nepal)

The PLA approach is informed by significant evidence on participatory approaches to community development. It involves forming community groups facilitated by multi-lingual local champions who then follow a four-phase meeting cycle supported via community-led facilitation. The four phases are aimed at enabling participants to identify health problems (PLA - phase 1), identify local solutions to these problems (PLA - phase 2), implement these solutions (PLA - phase 3) and evaluate and reflect on the success of the group (PLA - phase 4).

Dr. Michelle Heys

Associate Professor in Child Health Research

Population Policy and Practice Programme, UCL GOS-ICH

Dr. Neha Batura

Lecturer in Health Economics and Centre for Global Health Economics Deputy Director

UCL Institute for Global Health

Dr. Clare Llewellyn

Associate Professor in Child Health Research

Population Policy and Practice Programme, UCL GOS-ICH

Prof. Oyinlola Oyebode
Professor of Public Health, Lead, Centre for Public Health & Policy

QMUL, Wolfson Institute of Population Health Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry

Kelley Webb-Martin

Director of Delivery, Compliance, and Transformation

Children's Health 0-19 and HeadStart Service, Newham Council

Carol Irish

Head of Children's Health 0-19 Service 

Children's Health 0-19 Service, Newham Council

Jenny Gilmour

0-19 Service Development Lead

Tower Hamlets GP Care Group

Samuel Lam

Honorary Research Associate

UCL and Aceso Global Health Consultants (AGHC) 

Priyanka Patil

Research Assistant

UCL and Aceso Global Health Consultants (AGHC) 

Pro. Richard Watt

NIHR Senior Investigator 

UCL

Ciarán Forde

Professor Sensory Science and Eating Behavior l Division of Human Nutrition and Health

Wageningen University

Keri McCrickerd

Assist/Prof Singapore Institute for Clinical Sciences and Department of Paediatrics, Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine

National University of Singapore.

Dr Rana Conway

Research Department of Behavioural Science and Health 

UCL

Maryan Naman

Associate

AGHC

Subarna Chakraborty

Intern

AGHC

Gary Wooten 

Managing Director

Hitch Marketing

Cllr. Lakmini Shah

LBN Councillor and Director of Conversation Cafes 

Newham Council

Natasha Chug

Mphil Candidate

Cambridge

Dr. Edward Fottrell

Epidemiologist in Community Health, Intervention Development, and Evaluation

Institute for Global Health, Faculty of Pop Health Sciences

Vaikuntanath Kakarla

CFO- EKAM UK

EKAM UK

Dr. Sonia Ahmed

Lecturer in Public Health

Teeside University

Ashlee Teakle

Assistant Public Health Strategist

Newham Council

Joanna Drazdzewska

Head of Programmes

Women and Children First (UK)

Dr. Alex Nelson

Voluntary Sector Children and Youth Forum Coordinator

Volunteer Sector Tower Hamlets (VSTH)

Phoebe Kalungi

Community Child Healthy Weight Lead

Tower Hamlets GP Care Group

Amelie Gonguet

Community Child Healthy Weight Advisor

Tower Hamlets GP Care Group

Prof. Atul Singhal

Professor of Paediatric Nutrition

Population Policy and Practice, UCL

Prof. Audrey Prost

Professor of Global Health, Expert in participatory interventions to improve maternal and neonatal in LMICs

Institute for Global Health UCL

Prof. Mitch Blair

Professor of Paediatrics and Child Public Health

Imperial College London

Dr. Ian Warwick

Associate Professor in Education Practice and Society

Education, Practice, and Society; UCL Institute of Education

Dr. Logan Manikam

NIHR Advanced Fellow and Honorary Consultant in Public Health Medicine

Dept. of Epidemiology and Public Health, UCL IEHC

Prof. Monica Lakhanpaul

Professor of Integrated Community Child Health, and Co-Director of the CHIP Consortium

Population Policy and Practice Programme, UCL GOS-ICH

PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATORS

Steering Team

NEON

Team

We are supported by a diverse expert team of Investigators that include:

Where NEON

Currently Operates

Sub-optimal feeding, care, and dental hygiene practices have shown to be particularly prevalent in the UK South Asian population. The London Boroughs of Tower Hamlets, and Newham have one of the largest South Asian communities in the country alongside higher than average rates of child poverty and obesity.

Programme

Updates

22 OCT 2021

Recognised for its community-led and co-produced intervention excellence, NEON Programme won the ‘Health at Every Age’ award from the prestigious RSPHAwards

Nurture Early for Optimal Nutrition (NEON), led by Professor Monica Lakhanpaul and Dr Logan Manikam with Shereen Al Laham, Michelle Heys, Andrew Hayward, Neha Batura, Clare Llewellyn, Rajalakshmi Lakshman, Jennifer Martin, Lorna Benton, Sonia Ahmed, Edward Fortell, Oliver Lloyd-Houldey, Charlotte Lee, Taryn Smith, Georgia Black, Corinne Clarkson, Delceta Daley, Mary Marsh, Amanda Nutkins, Kelley Webb-Martin, Carol Irish, Chanel Edwards and Jenny Gilmour, has been recognised for supporting the development of safe, inclusive environments for mothers and carers to explore the critical health challenges they face.

11 SEP 2020

NEON programme presents Publication at the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health Online Conference (2020)

The first 1000 days of a child’s life are key to child development. Sub-optimal nutrition before the age of 5 can increase health risks such as obesity and dental problems later in life. The Nurture Early for Optimal Nutrition NEON programme is tackling this and will be presenting at the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health Online Conference 2020 with the poster “Nurture Early for Optimal Nutrition (NEON) Programme: Qualitative study of drivers of infant feeding practices in a British-Bangladeshi population” by Prof. Monica Lakhanpaul, Dr. Lorna Benton, Oliver Lloyd-Houldey, Dr. Logan Manikam, Diana Margot Rosenthal, Shereen Al Laham, Dr. Michelle Heys. See it here

24 NOV 2020

NEON publication and e-poster accepted to the NIHR Academy Members’ Conference (2020)

The recent publication, "Community engagement through the Nurture Early for Optimal Nutrition (NEON) programme to improve infant feeding, care and dental hygiene practices in South Asian infants aged < 2 years in East London" and e-poster produced by the Nurture Early for Optimal Nutrition (NEON) programme team has been accepted to the NIHR (National Institute for Health Research) Academy Members’ Conference 2020. This publication, written by Dr. Logan Manikam, Shereen Al Laham, Dr. Michelle Heys, Dr. Clare Llewellyn, Dr. Neha Batura, Prof. Andrew Hayward, Dr. Rajalakshmi Lakshman, Jenny Gilmour, Kelley Webb-Martin, Carol Irish, Chanel Edwards, Corinne Clarkson, Mary Marsh, Delceta Daley, Amanda Nutkins, Prof. Monica Lakhanpaul, highlights how community engagement can help to develop low-cost interventions to address key public health issues.

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