A quantitative analysis of determinants of child and maternal malnutrition in Nigeria

Malnutrition rates among children 0-36 months and women of reproductive age in Nigeria are high and vary significantly across rural-urban locations, geopolitical regions, and agroecological zones, constituting a significant public health challenge. Using National Demographic Health Survey (NDHS) 200...

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Autor principal: Ajieroh, Victor
Formato: Artículo preliminar
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/162268
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author Ajieroh, Victor
author_browse Ajieroh, Victor
author_facet Ajieroh, Victor
author_sort Ajieroh, Victor
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Malnutrition rates among children 0-36 months and women of reproductive age in Nigeria are high and vary significantly across rural-urban locations, geopolitical regions, and agroecological zones, constituting a significant public health challenge. Using National Demographic Health Survey (NDHS) 2003 data, we sought to understand better what the determinants of child and maternal nutrition are and whether they differ significantly in terms of their nature, levels, and effects across these domains. We also sought to understand what implications any significant differences would have for policy responses. A range of socioeconomic, demographic, and public health related factors work together to influence maternal and child nutrition outcomes among rural and urban dwellers across the geopolitical regions and agroecological zones. Our analyses show some major variables that influence maternal and child nutrition including household economic status, having a household head predominantly engaged with agriculture, maternal work to earn income, and maternal education or knowledge. Other determinants include mother's age, decision-making on her income and her health, percent of children under five years in a household, child based characteristics such as age and sex, dietary diversity and meal frequency, and public health services such as having antenatal care and vaccinations. The results indicate that while the effect of some determinants cuts across many of the rural and urban regions and zones, the effects of other determinants are more localized in rural or urban settings of particular regions and zones. While maternal education and knowledge are critical for improved maternal and child nutrition, efforts to improve household economic status, increase the rural farmers' benefits from agriculture, and empower mothers to earn income and take decisions, complemented with nutritional and public health services, are more likely to improve both child and maternal nutrition in the rural areas than in urban, especially in regions with the highest burden of malnutrition. Current levels of determinants appear linked more to policy implementation challenges than to the lack of or deficient components of policies to effectively address these determinants. To substantially improve nutrition conditions of mothers and children in rural Nigeria, strengthening or reviewing current policy and implementation processes in key areas is critical.
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spelling CGSpace1622682025-11-06T04:43:56Z A quantitative analysis of determinants of child and maternal malnutrition in Nigeria Ajieroh, Victor agriculture environment gender child health health malnutrition maternal and child health nutrition policies surveys children nutrition policies Malnutrition rates among children 0-36 months and women of reproductive age in Nigeria are high and vary significantly across rural-urban locations, geopolitical regions, and agroecological zones, constituting a significant public health challenge. Using National Demographic Health Survey (NDHS) 2003 data, we sought to understand better what the determinants of child and maternal nutrition are and whether they differ significantly in terms of their nature, levels, and effects across these domains. We also sought to understand what implications any significant differences would have for policy responses. A range of socioeconomic, demographic, and public health related factors work together to influence maternal and child nutrition outcomes among rural and urban dwellers across the geopolitical regions and agroecological zones. Our analyses show some major variables that influence maternal and child nutrition including household economic status, having a household head predominantly engaged with agriculture, maternal work to earn income, and maternal education or knowledge. Other determinants include mother's age, decision-making on her income and her health, percent of children under five years in a household, child based characteristics such as age and sex, dietary diversity and meal frequency, and public health services such as having antenatal care and vaccinations. The results indicate that while the effect of some determinants cuts across many of the rural and urban regions and zones, the effects of other determinants are more localized in rural or urban settings of particular regions and zones. While maternal education and knowledge are critical for improved maternal and child nutrition, efforts to improve household economic status, increase the rural farmers' benefits from agriculture, and empower mothers to earn income and take decisions, complemented with nutritional and public health services, are more likely to improve both child and maternal nutrition in the rural areas than in urban, especially in regions with the highest burden of malnutrition. Current levels of determinants appear linked more to policy implementation challenges than to the lack of or deficient components of policies to effectively address these determinants. To substantially improve nutrition conditions of mothers and children in rural Nigeria, strengthening or reviewing current policy and implementation processes in key areas is critical. 2009 2024-11-21T10:02:03Z 2024-11-21T10:02:03Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/162268 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Ajieroh, Victor. 2009. A quantitative analysis of determinants of child and maternal malnutrition in Nigeria. NSSP Working Paper 10. Abuja, Nigeria: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://hdl.handle.net/10568/162268
spellingShingle agriculture
environment
gender
child health
health
malnutrition
maternal and child health
nutrition
policies
surveys
children
nutrition policies
Ajieroh, Victor
A quantitative analysis of determinants of child and maternal malnutrition in Nigeria
title A quantitative analysis of determinants of child and maternal malnutrition in Nigeria
title_full A quantitative analysis of determinants of child and maternal malnutrition in Nigeria
title_fullStr A quantitative analysis of determinants of child and maternal malnutrition in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed A quantitative analysis of determinants of child and maternal malnutrition in Nigeria
title_short A quantitative analysis of determinants of child and maternal malnutrition in Nigeria
title_sort quantitative analysis of determinants of child and maternal malnutrition in nigeria
topic agriculture
environment
gender
child health
health
malnutrition
maternal and child health
nutrition
policies
surveys
children
nutrition policies
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/162268
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