Literature DB >> 18510203

Impact of orphanhood on underweight prevalence in sub-Saharan Africa.

Jonathan Rivers1, John Mason, Eva Silvestre, Stuart Gillespie, Mary Mahy, Roeland Monasch.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In Africa, approximately 25 million people live with HIV/AIDS and 12 million children are orphaned. Although evidence indicates that orphans risk losing opportunities for adequate education, health care, and future employment, the immediate effects of orphanhood on child nutritional status remain poorly understood.
OBJECTIVE: This paper assesses the nutritional impact of orphanhood, with particular emphasis on taking account of various factors potentially confounding or masking these impacts.
METHODS: Child anthropometry and orphan status were examined in 23 Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys and Demographic and Health Surveys throughout sub-Saharan Africa, which were subsequently merged into larger, region-specific datasets (East, West, and Southern Africa). To compare orphans and nonorphans, linear regression and probit models were developed, taking account of orphan status and type, presence of a surviving parent in the household, household structure, child age and sex, urban versus rural residence, and current wealth status.
RESULTS: Few differences emerged between orphans and nonorphans in controlled and uncontrolled comparisons, regardless of orphan type, presence of surviving parent, or household structure. Age differentials did confound nutritional comparisons, although in the counterintuitive direction, with orphans (who were 8 months older on average) becoming less malnourished when age differences were taken into account. Wealth did appear to be associated with orphanhood status, although it did not significantly confound nutritional comparisons.
CONCLUSIONS: Orphans were not consistently more malnourished than nonorphans, even when potential confounding variables were examined. Since household wealth status is likely to change after becoming affected by HIV ruling out wealth as a potential confounder would require more detailed, prospective studies.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18510203     DOI: 10.1177/156482650802900104

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Food Nutr Bull        ISSN: 0379-5721            Impact factor:   2.069


  5 in total

1.  Psychosocial functioning among HIV-affected youth and their caregivers in Haiti: implications for family-focused service provision in high HIV burden settings.

Authors:  Mary C Smith Fawzi; Eddy Eustache; Catherine Oswald; Pamela Surkan; Ermaze Louis; Fiona Scanlan; Richard Wong; Michelle Li; Joia Mukherjee
Journal:  AIDS Patient Care STDS       Date:  2010-03       Impact factor: 5.078

Review 2.  Data availability on men's involvement in families in sub-Saharan Africa to inform family-centred programmes for children affected by HIV and AIDS.

Authors:  Victoria Hosegood; Sangeetha Madhavan
Journal:  J Int AIDS Soc       Date:  2010-06-23       Impact factor: 5.396

3.  Costs of inaction on maternal mortality: qualitative evidence of the impacts of maternal deaths on living children in Tanzania.

Authors:  Alicia Ely Yamin; Vanessa M Boulanger; Kathryn L Falb; Jane Shuma; Jennifer Leaning
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-08-19       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  HIV and AIDS-related knowledge among women in Iraq.

Authors:  Seter Siziya; Adamson S Muula; Emmanuel Rudatsikira
Journal:  BMC Res Notes       Date:  2008-12-01

5.  Unconditional government cash transfers in support of orphaned and vulnerable adolescents in western Kenya: Is there an association with psychological wellbeing?

Authors:  Sylvia Shangani; Don Operario; Becky Genberg; Kipruto Kirwa; Miriam Midoun; Lukoye Atwoli; David Ayuku; Omar Galárraga; Paula Braitstein
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-05-31       Impact factor: 3.240

  5 in total

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