Nutrients, Vol. 18, Pages 607: Socioeconomic and Environmental Factors Associated with Child Undernutrition and Growth Failure in Eastern Africa

Nutrients, Vol. 18, Pages 607: Socioeconomic and Environmental Factors Associated with Child Undernutrition and Growth Failure in Eastern Africa

Nutrients doi: 10.3390/nu18040607

Authors:
Maryam Siddiqa
Gulzar Shah
Tahreem Asif
Asifa Kamal
Bushra Shah

Background and Objective: This study examines the factors associated with child undernutrition among children under five in Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, and Tanzania. It uses the Composite Index of Anthropometric Failure to measure the full burden of undernutrition, combining weight-for-height (WHZ), weight-for-age (WAZ), and height-for-age (HAZ) indicators. This approach captures children facing multiple forms of failure that single indicators miss. Methods: The study analyzed 37,570 children using nationally representative Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data for Ethiopia 2019, Kenya 2022, Madagascar 2021, and Tanzania 2022. A binary logistic regression model identified key predictors of child undernutrition across countries. Results: The prevalence of anthropometric failure ranged from 24% to 44%. Higher parental education, child’s age, socioeconomic status, child’s sex, and a postnatal checkup within 2 months were associated with a lower odds of anthropometric failure. Children of educated mothers in Ethiopia (AOR = 0.547) and Tanzania (AOR = 0.606) had better outcomes. Educated fathers in Kenya (AOR = 0.589) and Madagascar (AOR = 0.369) reduced the risk of child undernutrition. Children aged 13–24 months had a higher risk in all countries. In Madagascar (AOR = 0.309), children who received a postnatal checkup had a decreased risk of malnutrition. Children from rich households in Ethiopia (AOR = 0.645) and from middle (AOR = 0.683) and rich (AOR = 0.535) households in Kenya had significantly lower odds of undernutrition. In comparison, female children had lower odds of anthropometric failure in all four countries. Conclusions: Viewed through a nutrition equity lens, these findings underscore the importance of recognizing how the intersectionality of anthropometric failures disproportionately affects children from poorer households and communities with limited access to education and postnatal care. This study advances existing knowledge by using the Composite Index of Anthropometric Failure to show overlapping and hidden forms of undernutrition. The findings identify child age, parental education, postnatal checkup, child sex, and socioeconomic status as shared priorities for reducing undernutrition. The results provide country-specific insights for designing integrated, evidence-based nutrition interventions in Eastern Africa.

​Background and Objective: This study examines the factors associated with child undernutrition among children under five in Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, and Tanzania. It uses the Composite Index of Anthropometric Failure to measure the full burden of undernutrition, combining weight-for-height (WHZ), weight-for-age (WAZ), and height-for-age (HAZ) indicators. This approach captures children facing multiple forms of failure that single indicators miss. Methods: The study analyzed 37,570 children using nationally representative Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data for Ethiopia 2019, Kenya 2022, Madagascar 2021, and Tanzania 2022. A binary logistic regression model identified key predictors of child undernutrition across countries. Results: The prevalence of anthropometric failure ranged from 24% to 44%. Higher parental education, child’s age, socioeconomic status, child’s sex, and a postnatal checkup within 2 months were associated with a lower odds of anthropometric failure. Children of educated mothers in Ethiopia (AOR = 0.547) and Tanzania (AOR = 0.606) had better outcomes. Educated fathers in Kenya (AOR = 0.589) and Madagascar (AOR = 0.369) reduced the risk of child undernutrition. Children aged 13–24 months had a higher risk in all countries. In Madagascar (AOR = 0.309), children who received a postnatal checkup had a decreased risk of malnutrition. Children from rich households in Ethiopia (AOR = 0.645) and from middle (AOR = 0.683) and rich (AOR = 0.535) households in Kenya had significantly lower odds of undernutrition. In comparison, female children had lower odds of anthropometric failure in all four countries. Conclusions: Viewed through a nutrition equity lens, these findings underscore the importance of recognizing how the intersectionality of anthropometric failures disproportionately affects children from poorer households and communities with limited access to education and postnatal care. This study advances existing knowledge by using the Composite Index of Anthropometric Failure to show overlapping and hidden forms of undernutrition. The findings identify child age, parental education, postnatal checkup, child sex, and socioeconomic status as shared priorities for reducing undernutrition. The results provide country-specific insights for designing integrated, evidence-based nutrition interventions in Eastern Africa. Read More

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