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Completed FELLOWSHIP UKRI Gateway to Research

Co-Benefits of Largescale Organic Farming on Environmental and Human Health (BLOOM): A Natural Experiment in Andhra Pradesh, India

£12.25M GBP

Funder UK Research and Innovation Future Leaders Fellowship
Recipient Organization University of Edinburgh
Country United Kingdom
Start Date Feb 01, 2021
End Date Jan 31, 2025
Duration 1,460 days
Number of Grantees 2
Roles Fellow; Award Holder
Data Source UKRI Gateway to Research
Grant ID MR/T044527/1
Grant Description

The way that we produce food has changed profoundly, and, as a result, so too has our dietary intake. Whilst these changes have resulted in unprecedented declines in undernutrition, they have come with a cost in terms of environmental degradation and the rising tide of obesity. Today, 1 in 3 people around the world experience some form of malnutrition and dietary risks are the #1 behavioural risk factor for deaths and #2 behavioural risk factor for disability.

Our food system is failing us. Transformational action is urgently needed. However, though many theoretical frameworks exist for sustainable food systems, there is very limited data from the field at scale.

This is the gap the 'Co-Benefits of Largescale Organic Farming On HuMan Health' (BLOOM) project aims to fill.

The government of Andhra Pradesh in India recently issued an order to support the transition to organic farming across the state known as, 'Zero Budget Natural Farming' (ZBNF). There is currently no scientific evidence to support the effectiveness of the ZBNF programme in terms of improving the livelihoods and health of farmers, yet the state government of Andhra Pradesh is moving forward with implementation.

The proposed scientific evaluation will fill this critical gap. The Fellow will conduct a natural experiment using population-based surveys of 2,000 rural households in Andhra Pradesh and in the neighbouring state of Telangana (serving as a control) in 2021 (baseline) with two annual follow-up visits (2022 and 2023). Telangana is a unique control given that until June 2, 2014 it was part of Andhra Pradesh.

BLOOM will address the following aims: (i) to determine if organic farming has co-benefits on human nutrition and health, and (ii) to ascertain the role of crop yields, household economics, decent work, food security, and diet quality in the causal pathway between organic farming and these outcomes. Specific nutrition and health outcomes to be quantified include (i) urinary biomarkers of exposure to pesticides (20% random subsample of households with children

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University of Edinburgh

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