| Literature DB >> 27561945 |
Oluwafunmilade A Adesanya1, Chi Chiao2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nigeria has the second highest estimated number of deaths due to acute respiratory infection (ARI) among children under five in the world. A common hypothesis is that the inequitable distribution of socioeconomic resources shapes individual lifestyles and health behaviors, which leads to poorer health, including symptoms of ARI. This study examined whether lifestyle factors are associated with ARI risk among Nigerian children aged less than 5 years, taking individual-level and contextual-level risk factors into consideration.Entities:
Keywords: (MeSH): Symptoms of acute respiratory infection (ARI); Lifestyle factors; Multilevel analysis; Nigeria; Young children
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27561945 PMCID: PMC5000491 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-016-3565-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Hypothesized neighborhood socioeconomic influences, together with the distribution and categorization of neighborhood-level variables, which were used to predict the likelihood of development of ARI symptoms; 2013 NDHS (children 0–5, n = 896)
| Neighborhood characteristic | Percentage or mean (Std Dev) | Categorization | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Community use of biomass cooking fuel | 78.82 (40.85) | Community biomass use: 0–1 | |
| Low (0 to 0.738) | 27.87 (44.84) | Lowest use of biomass cooking fuel | |
| Median (0.739 to0. 98) | 90.57 (29.22) | Median use of biomass cooking fuel | |
| High (0.981 to 1) | 99.84 (3.87) | Highest use of biomass cooking fuel | |
| Community wealth index | 44.55 (49.70) | Lowest quartile versus higher quartile | |
| The first quartile (0 to 0) | 0 | ||
| The second quartile (2 to 40) | 16.31 (36.95) | ||
| The third quartile (40 to 92) | 70.18 (45.74) | ||
| The fourth quartile (93 to 100) | 98.82 (10.77) | Highest proportion of middle, rich and richest in the community | |
| Community OVC status | 4.23 (20.13) | Proportion of OVC within a community: 0–1 | |
| Low (0) | 0 | Lowest OVC rate in community | |
| Median (1.5 to 5.0) | 3.31 (1) | Median OVC rate in community | |
| High (5.1 to 50) | 11.02 (5.5) | Highest OVC rate in community | |
| Residence | |||
| Urban | 35.88 (1.10) | ||
| Rural | 64.11 (1.10) | ||
| Province | |||
| North West | 17.27 (0.89) | ||
| North Central | 13.71 (0.84) | ||
| North East | 36.60 (1.06) | ||
| South East | 8.81 (0.67) | ||
| South South | 9.46 (0.54) | ||
| South West | 14.13 (0.83) | ||
ARI prevalence by sample characteristics for children under 5 years of age [percentage or mean (Std Dev)], NDHS 2013
| Total | ARI prevalence | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Percentage or mean | Std. Dev. | Percentage or mean | ||
|
| ||||
| Lifestyle and health behaviors | ||||
| Cooking method | ||||
| Kerosene/charcoal outdoors or in a separate place | 10.03 | 0.64 | ||
| In-house use of biomass fuel for cooking | 42.11 | 2.07 | ||
| In-house use of kerosene/charcoal for cooking | 11.33 | 1.20 | ||
| Cooking using biomass fuel outdoors or in a separate place | 34.86 | 2.39 | ||
| Other | 1.68 | 1.29 | ||
| Smoking status of members of the household | ||||
| Yes | 6.82 | 2.89 | ||
| No | 93.18 | 1.86 | ||
| Hand-washing | ||||
| Observed | 38.78 | 1.36 | ||
| Not observed | 61.22 | 2.27 | ||
| Individual and household covariates | ||||
|
| ||||
| Gender | ||||
| Female | 49.89 | 1.96 | ||
| Male | 50.11 | 1.90 | ||
| Age (in months) | 28.14 | 17.32 | ||
| 0–5 | 10.32 | 1.46 | ||
| 6–11 | 11.27 | 2.82 | ||
| 12–23 | 20.37 | 3.08 | ||
| 24–35 | 18.95 | 2.08 | ||
| 36–59 | 39.08 | 1.12 | ||
| Birth order | 3.88 | 2.54 | ||
| 1–3 | 52.20 | 1.79 | ||
| 4–6 | 31.73 | 1.76 | ||
| >6 | 16.07 | 2.70 | ||
| OVC status | ||||
| OVC | 3.91 | 3.54 | ||
| Non-OVC | 96.09 | 1.86 | ||
|
| ||||
| Maternal education | ||||
| No education | 48.31 | 1.96 | ||
| Primary education | 19.16 | 2.05 | ||
| Secondary and above | 32.53 | 1.81 | ||
| Household wealth | ||||
| Richest | 18.14 | 0.98 | ||
| Richer | 18.14 | 1.35 | ||
| Middle | 19.07 | 2.03 | ||
| Poorer | 22.40 | 2.88 | ||
| Poorest | 22.96 | 2.09 | ||
| Outcome measure | ||||
| Symptoms of ARI | 1.93 | |||
Unweighted N’s and weighted percentages and means are reported. Percentages may not add up to 100 due to rounding
Fig. 1Prevalence of acute respiratory tract infection (ARI) symptoms among individuals with the status of orphans/vulnerable children (OVC) by region
Results of the multilevel regressions of the odds of ARI symptoms among young children, 2013 NDHS (N = 28,596)
| MODEL 1 | MODEL 2 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| AOR | 95 % CI | AOR | 95 % CI | |
| Lifestyle and health behaviors | |||||
| Cooking method (ref = Kerosene/charcoal outdoors or a separate place) | |||||
| In-house use of biomass fuel | 2.38** | 1.34–4.24 | 2.30** | 1.26–4.20 | |
| In-house use of kerosene/charcoal | 2.08* | 1.17–3.70 | 2.11** | 1.19–3.72 | |
| Outdoor or separate use of biomass fuel | 2.54** | 1.45–4.45 | 2.28** | 1.27–4.10 | |
| Other | 2.51 | 0.95–6.64 | 2.42 | 0.94–6.25 | |
| Smoking of members of the household (ref = No) | |||||
| Ever smoked | 1.37* | 1.01–1.87 | 1.33 | 0.98–1.81 | |
| Hand-washing (ref = Observed) | |||||
| Not observed | 1.59*** | 1.28–1.98 | 1.66** | 1.33–2.07 | |
| Neighborhood characteristic | |||||
| Community OVC status (ref = Low) | |||||
| Median | 1.28 | 0.94–1.75 | |||
| High | 1.74*** | 1.34–2.25 | |||
| Region of residence (ref = North West) | |||||
| North Central | 0.39*** | 0.27–0.57 | |||
| North East | 0.15*** | 0.11–0.20 | |||
| South East | 0.30*** | 0.19–0.48 | |||
| South South | 0.35*** | 0.22–0.57 | |||
| South West | 0.26*** | 0.15–0.43 | |||
| Community wealth index (ref = The first quartile) | |||||
| The second quartile | 1.03 | 0.67–1.58 | |||
| The third quartile | 0.94 | 0.54–1.62 | |||
| The fourth quartile | 1.05 | 0.56–1.95 | |||
| Community use of biomass cooking fuel (ref = Low use) | |||||
| Median use | 0.82 | 0.51–1.31 | |||
| High use | 1.07 | 0.63–1.81 | |||
| Urban residence (ref = Rural) | 0.95 | 0.68–1.33 | |||
| Individual and household backgrounds | |||||
| Female gendered (ref = Male) | 1.02 | 0.85–1.21 | 1.03 | 0.86–1.22 | |
| Birth order (ref = 1–3) | |||||
| 4–6 | 0.92 | 0.75–1.13 | 0.94 | 0.76–1.15 | |
| >6 | 1.35* | 1.07–1.71 | 1.37** | 1.08–1.73 | |
| Age in months (ref = 36–59) | |||||
| 0–5 | 1.21 | 0.85–1.73 | 1.20 | 0.85–1.71 | |
| 6–11 | 2.67*** | 2.02–3.53 | 2.66*** | 2.01–3.51 | |
| 12–23 | 2.88*** | 2.28–3.64 | 2.85*** | 2.25–3.60 | |
| 24–35 | 1.82*** | 1.40–2.36 | 1.80*** | 1.30–2.34 | |
| OVC (ref = Non-OVC) | 1.43* | 1.01–2.02 | 1.27 | 0.90–1.80 | |
| Maternal education (ref = Secondary or above) | |||||
| No education | 0.63** | 0.47–0.84 | 0.63** | 0.47–0.85 | |
| Primary education | 0.70* | 0.53–0.93 | 0.69** | 0.53–0.92 | |
| Household wealth (ref = Richest) | |||||
| Richer | 1.19 | 0.76–1.87 | 1.15 | 0.74–1.79 | |
| Middle | 1.72* | 1.06–2.82 | 1.61 | 0.97–2.65 | |
| Poorer | 2.72*** | 1.64–4.51 | 2.39** | 1.38–4.14 | |
| Poorest | 1.94* | 1.13–3.32 | 1.60 | 0.88–2.91 | |
|
| Coeff | SE | Coeff | SE | |
| Log likelihood | −2561.92 | −2479.75 | |||
| Comparison to previous model | |||||
| Chi-square | 82.17*** | ||||
| Degrees of freedom | 13 | ||||
| Random variance | |||||
| Intra-class correlation (ICC) | 0.26* | 0.13* | |||
| Variance between neighborhoods | 1.17*** | 0.01 | 0.70*** | 0.08 | |
Intra-class correlation (ICC) measures the degrees of clustering with random intercepts. The correlation of the 2-level multilevel logistic regressions is calculated by σμ 2/ [σμ 2 + π2/3], where σμ 2 denotes neighborhood- level variance
Abbreviations: AOR represents adjusted odds ratios for sample cluster, CI represents confidence interval
* p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001