Similar Items: Why is child malnutrition lower in urban than rural areas?: evidence from 36 developing countries
- Why is child malnutrition lower in urban than rural areas? evidence from 36 developing countries
- Why is child malnutrition lower in urban than in rural areas? evidence from 36 developing countries
- Features of urban food and nutrition security and considerations for successful urban programming
- The impact of daycare programmes on child health, nutrition and development in developing countries: A systematic review
- Guatemala City: a focus on working women and childcare
- Accra: women and children getting by in urban Accra
Author: Smith, Lisa C.
- Measuring food security using household expenditure surveys
- Household decisions, gender, and development: A synthesis of recent research
- The importance of women’s status for child nutrition in developing countries
- Why is child malnutrition lower in urban than in rural areas? evidence from 36 developing countries
- Superando la Desnutrición Infantil en Países en Desarrollo: Logros Pasados y Opciones Futuras
- Why is child malnutrition lower in urban than rural areas?: evidence from 36 developing countries
Author: Ruel, Marie T.
- What do we know about the future of diets and nutrition?
- An integrated agriculture and nutrition program in Burkina Faso has positive intrahousehold spillover effects on maternal and child nutritional status, but no sustained longterm improvements in household welfare
- Impact on child acute malnutrition of integrating a preventive nutrition package into facility-based screening for acute malnutrition during well-baby consultation: A cluster-randomized controlled trial in Burkina Faso
- Double-duty actions: Seizing programme and policy opportunities to address malnutrition in all its forms
- Maternal and child nutrition: Building momentum for impact
- A multiple-method approach to studying childcare in an urban environment: the case of Accra, Ghana