Literature DB >> 29642714

Study of the Determinants of Chronic Malnutrition in Northern Nigeria: Quantitative Evidence from the Nigeria Demographic and Health Surveys International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) Working Paper 45 (September 2017).

Mulubrhan Amare1, Todd Benson1, Olusegun Fadare1, Motunrayo Oyeyemi1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Close to half of all children younger than 5 years in the Northeast and Northwest geopolitical zones were estimated to be stunted in their growth for their age in 2013 compared to 22% of children in the rest of Nigeria.
OBJECTIVES: We examine the drivers of chronic child undernutrition in northern Nigeria and how those drivers differ from other areas of the country.
METHODS: Both a standard child-level regression-based approach and decomposition analysis were used to address the determinants of stunting and decompose how drivers differ between northern Nigeria and other areas of the country using 2008 and 2013 Nigeria DHS data.
RESULTS: There are strong differences in the levels of the determinants of undernutrition in young children between the 2 parts of the country. However, equally important, the decomposition analysis shows that there are significant differences between northern Nigeria and other areas of Nigeria in the effect of the same determinant of nutritional status in accelerating or retarding the linear growth of young children.
CONCLUSIONS: A national program to address child undernutrition must recognize this heterogeneity in its design. To impose across Nigeria, a single set of approaches to address the factors which results in stunted children is likely to fail for large numbers of children if these strong geographical differences in how these determinants operate to affect child nutritional status are not considered. Solutions need to be developed within northern Nigeria to more closely reflect the way the determinants of nutritional status operate in this area of the country.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Africa; child growth; child nutrition; early childhood nutrition

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29642714     DOI: 10.1177/0379572118768568

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


  5 in total

1.  Mother's nutrition-related knowledge and child nutrition outcomes: Empirical evidence from Nigeria.

Authors:  Olusegun Fadare; Mulubrhan Amare; George Mavrotas; Dare Akerele; Adebayo Ogunniyi
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-02-28       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Risk Factors Associated with Under-Five Stunting, Wasting, and Underweight Based on Ethiopian Demographic Health Survey Datasets in Tigray Region, Ethiopia.

Authors:  Berhanu Teshome Woldeamanuel; Tigist Tigabie Tesfaye
Journal:  J Nutr Metab       Date:  2019-12-20

3.  Undernutrition, polygynous context and family structure: a multilevel analysis of cross-sectional surveys of 350 000 mother-child pairs from 32 countries.

Authors:  Seun Stephen Anjorin; Olalekan A Uthman; Edward Kwabena Ameyaw; Bright Opoku Ahinkorah; Vijay Kumar Chattu; Ghose Bishwajit; Abdul-Aziz Seidu; Eugene Kofuor Maafo Darteh; Sanni Yaya
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2020-10

4.  COVID-19, food insecurity and dietary diversity of households: Survey evidence from Nigeria.

Authors:  Bedru B Balana; Adebayo Ogunniyi; Motunrayo Oyeyemi; Adetunji Fasoranti; Hyacinth Edeh; Kwaw Andam
Journal:  Food Secur       Date:  2022-08-16       Impact factor: 7.141

5.  Understanding drivers of stunting reduction in Nigeria from 2003 to 2018: a regression analysis.

Authors:  Olutayo Adeyemi; Mariama Toure; Namukolo Covic; Mara van den Bold; Nicholas Nisbett; Derek Headey
Journal:  Food Secur       Date:  2022-03-26       Impact factor: 7.141

  5 in total

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