| Literature DB >> 28555186 |
Oluwakemi Rachel Ajayi1, Glenda Beverley Matthews1, Myra Taylor2, Jane Dene Kvalsvig2, Leslie Davidson3, Shuaib Kauchali4, Claude Mellins5.
Abstract
A recent study based on a sample of 1,580 children from five adjacent geographical locations in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, was carried out to examine the association of nutrition, family influence, preschool education, and disadvantages in geographical location with the cognitive development of school children. Data were collected on the children from 2009 to 2011 for this developmental study and included cognitive scores and information on the health and nutrition of the children. The current study analyzed the association of demographic variables (geographical location (site)), child variables (sex, preschool education and socioeconomic status), parental level of education (maternal and paternal), child's health (HIV status and hemoglobin level) and anthropometric measures of nutritional status (height-for-age) with children's cognitive outcomes. The hypothesis is that the nutritional status of children is a pathway through which the indirect effects of the variables of interest exert influence on their cognitive outcomes. Factor analysis based on principal components was used to create a variable based on the cognitive measures, correlations were used to examine the bivariate association between the variables of interest in the preliminary analysis and a path analysis was constructed, which was used for the disaggregation of the direct and indirect effects of the predictors for each cognitive test in a structural equation model. The results revealed that nutritional status directly predicts cognitive test scores and is a path through which other variables indirectly influence children's cognitive outcome and development.Entities:
Keywords: children’s health; cognitive development; nutrition; preschool education; structural equation modelling
Year: 2017 PMID: 28555186 PMCID: PMC5430042 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2017.00017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Descriptive statistics of the children’s categorical variables (.
| Site | Sex | Preschool education | Child HIV | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | % | % | % | ||||||||
| 1 | 241 | 17.4 | M | 698 | 50.4 | None | 481 | 35.3 | Positive | 62 | 3.9 |
| 2 | 222 | 16.0 | F | 688 | 49.6 | Received | 883 | 64.7 | Negative | 1278 | 80.8 |
| 3 | 150 | 10.8 | Unknown | 241 | 15.2 | ||||||
| 4 | 461 | 33.3 | |||||||||
| 5 | 312 | 10.8 | |||||||||
| 0. (None) | 65 | 4.1 | 0. (None) | 88 | 5.6 | 1. Lowest 20% | 327 | 20.8 | |||
| 1. Grade 1–7 (primary) | 223 | 14.1 | 1. Grade 1–7 (primary) | 170 | 10.7 | 2. Low middle | 355 | 22.6 | |||
| 2. Grade 8–11 (high school) | 665 | 42.0 | 2. Grade 8–11 (high school) | 407 | 25.7 | 3. Middle | 250 | 15.9 | |||
| 3. Grade 12 (matric) | 359 | 22.7 | 3. Grade 12 (matric) | 437 | 27.6 | 4. High middle | 314 | 20.0 | |||
| 4. >Grade 12 (tertiary) | 3 | 0.2 | 4. >Grade 12 (tertiary) | 2 | 0.1 | 5. Top 20% | 326 | 20.7 | |||
| 5. Unknown | 267 | 16.9 | 5. Unknown | 478 | 30.2 | ||||||
Parameter estimates, standard errors, .
| Factor based on three scores | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parameter | SE | |||
| Intercept | −3.597 | 0.426 | −8.437 | 0.000 |
| Site 1 | 0.103 | 0.085 | −1.217 | 0.224 |
| Site 2 | −0.044 | 0.085 | −0.520 | 0.603 |
| Site 3 | −0.172 | 0.099 | −1.748 | 0.081 |
| Site 4 | −0.061 | 0.072 | −0.840 | 0.401 |
| Female | −0.060 | 0.051 | −1.186 | 0.236 |
| None | −0.156 | 0.060 | −2.606 | 0.009 |
| HIV positive | −0.070 | 0.152 | −0.462 | 0.644 |
| HIV negative | 0.091 | 0.075 | 1.215 | 0.225 |
| Age (months) | 0.046 | 0.004 | 11.500 | 0.000 |
| Height-for-age | 0.157 | 0.027 | 5.865 | 0.000 |
| Hemoglobin | −0.001 | 0.022 | −0.047 | 0.962 |
| SES 1 | −0.014 | 0.080 | −0.180 | 0.857 |
| SES 2 | −0.008 | 0.078 | −0.099 | 0.921 |
| SES 3 | 0.096 | 0.085 | 1.131 | 0.258 |
| SES 4 | −0.016 | 0.078 | −0.198 | 0.843 |
| Maternal education = 0 | −0.084 | 0.142 | −0.589 | 0.556 |
| Maternal education = 1 | −0.236 | 0.097 | −2.438 | 0.015 |
| Maternal education = 2 | −0.097 | 0.076 | −1.281 | 0.201 |
| Maternal education = 3 | 0.121 | 0.085 | 1.434 | 0.152 |
| Maternal education = 4 | 0.050 | 0.653 | 0.076 | 0.939 |
| Paternal education = 0 | −0.010 | 0.121 | −0.079 | 0.937 |
| Paternal education = 1 | −0.028 | 0.092 | −0.303 | 0.762 |
| Paternal education = 2 | 0.081 | 0.068 | 1.184 | 0.237 |
| Paternal education = 3 | 0.127 | 0.068 | 1.854 | 0.064 |
Bivariate correlations.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Atlantis | 1 | |||||
| 2. Grover | 0.378 | 1 | ||||
| 3. Hand movement | 0.336 | 0.435 | 1 | |||
| 4. Age (month) | 0.312 | 0.442 | 0.368 | 1 | ||
| 5. Height-for-age | 0.151 | 0.182 | 0.135 | 0.028 | 1 | |
| 6. Hemoglobin | −0.005 | 0.040 | 0.054 | −0.002 | 0.111 | 1 |
*p < 0.05.
**p < 0.01.
Figure 1Model with the mediation of nutritional status for Atlantis test.
Figure 3Model with the mediation of nutritional status for Hand movement.
Figure 2Model with the mediation of nutritional status for Grover test.
Maximum likelihood estimates of covariance in the model.
| Covariance | Correlation estimate | Standard error | Covariance estimate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mothed ↔ Index (SES) | 0.225 | 0.049 | 4.602 | |
| Site ↔ Index (SES) | 0.191 | 0.055 | 3.470 | |
| Age ↔ childHb | 0.009 | 0.223 | 0.042 | 0.966 |
| Hazscore ↔ HIV status | 0.034 | 0.011 | 3.007 | 0.003 |
| Hazscore ↔ Age | −0.198 | 0.188 | −1.052 | 0.293 |
| Education ↔ Fathed | −0.006 | 0.020 | −0.281 | 0.779 |
| Education ↔ Mothed | 0.045 | 0.017 | 2.635 | 0.008 |
| Hazscore ↔ Index (SES) | 0.106 | 0.039 | 2.744 | 0.006 |
| Hazscore ↔ Site | 0.043 | 0.038 | 1.130 | 0.258 |
***p < 0.001.