Caregivers' nutritional knowledge and attitudes mediate seasonal shifts in children's diets

Smallholder farmers dependent on rain‐fed agriculture experience seasonal variationsin food and nutrient availability occasioned by seasonality of production patterns. This results in periods of nutrient abundance in the plenty seasons followed closely by periods of nutrient inadequacies and malnutr...

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Autores principales: Oduor, Francis Odhiambo, Boedecker, J., Kennedy, G., Mituki‐Mungiria, D., Termote, Céline
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Wiley 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/98259
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author Oduor, Francis Odhiambo
Boedecker, J.
Kennedy, G.
Mituki‐Mungiria, D.
Termote, Céline
author_browse Boedecker, J.
Kennedy, G.
Mituki‐Mungiria, D.
Oduor, Francis Odhiambo
Termote, Céline
author_facet Oduor, Francis Odhiambo
Boedecker, J.
Kennedy, G.
Mituki‐Mungiria, D.
Termote, Céline
author_sort Oduor, Francis Odhiambo
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Smallholder farmers dependent on rain‐fed agriculture experience seasonal variationsin food and nutrient availability occasioned by seasonality of production patterns. This results in periods of nutrient abundance in the plenty seasons followed closely by periods of nutrient inadequacies and malnutrition. This pattern contributes to a cycle of deteriorating health and nutrition status and deprives children of their ability to realize full developmental potential. This study investigates the role of caregiver's nutritional knowledge and attitudes in mediating effects of seasonality on children's diets. Repeated cross‐sectional surveys were conducted on 151 randomly selected households in the plenty and lean seasons to collect dietary data using two non‐consecutive quantitative 24‐hr recalls and caregiver's nutritional knowledge and attitudes assessed using interviewer administered questionnaire. Sixty‐five percent of the caregivers had attained a primary level education or less. There was a positive modest correlation between caregivers' nutritional knowledge and their attitudes (r = 0.3, P < 0.000, α = 0.01). Children's mean adequacy ratio was significantly higher in the plenty season than in the lean season (0.84 vs. 0.80, P < 0.000). A two‐block hierarchical regression to predict the seasonal changes in dietary quality of children using caregiver's nutritional knowledge and attitude scores while controlling for the effect of sociodemographics and mean adequacy ratio at first season (plenty) found that caregiver's nutritional knowledge (ß = −0.007, SE = 0.003, P = 0.027, 95% CI [−0.013, −0.001] ŋ2 = 0.034) but not attitudes had significant contribution to the prediction. Maternal nutritional knowledge mediates seasonal variation in child nutrient intakes.
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spelling CGSpace982592025-11-12T05:48:32Z Caregivers' nutritional knowledge and attitudes mediate seasonal shifts in children's diets Oduor, Francis Odhiambo Boedecker, J. Kennedy, G. Mituki‐Mungiria, D. Termote, Céline attitudes children trace elements nutrition seasonality Smallholder farmers dependent on rain‐fed agriculture experience seasonal variationsin food and nutrient availability occasioned by seasonality of production patterns. This results in periods of nutrient abundance in the plenty seasons followed closely by periods of nutrient inadequacies and malnutrition. This pattern contributes to a cycle of deteriorating health and nutrition status and deprives children of their ability to realize full developmental potential. This study investigates the role of caregiver's nutritional knowledge and attitudes in mediating effects of seasonality on children's diets. Repeated cross‐sectional surveys were conducted on 151 randomly selected households in the plenty and lean seasons to collect dietary data using two non‐consecutive quantitative 24‐hr recalls and caregiver's nutritional knowledge and attitudes assessed using interviewer administered questionnaire. Sixty‐five percent of the caregivers had attained a primary level education or less. There was a positive modest correlation between caregivers' nutritional knowledge and their attitudes (r = 0.3, P < 0.000, α = 0.01). Children's mean adequacy ratio was significantly higher in the plenty season than in the lean season (0.84 vs. 0.80, P < 0.000). A two‐block hierarchical regression to predict the seasonal changes in dietary quality of children using caregiver's nutritional knowledge and attitude scores while controlling for the effect of sociodemographics and mean adequacy ratio at first season (plenty) found that caregiver's nutritional knowledge (ß = −0.007, SE = 0.003, P = 0.027, 95% CI [−0.013, −0.001] ŋ2 = 0.034) but not attitudes had significant contribution to the prediction. Maternal nutritional knowledge mediates seasonal variation in child nutrient intakes. 2019-01 2018-11-20T14:27:44Z 2018-11-20T14:27:44Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/98259 en Open Access application/pdf Wiley Oduor, F.O.; Boedecker, J.; Kennedy, G.; Mituki‐Mungiria, D.; Termote, C. (2018). Caregivers' nutritional knowledge and attitudes mediate seasonal shifts in children's diets. Maternal and Child Nutrition, e12633 ISSN: 1740-8695
spellingShingle attitudes
children
trace elements
nutrition
seasonality
Oduor, Francis Odhiambo
Boedecker, J.
Kennedy, G.
Mituki‐Mungiria, D.
Termote, Céline
Caregivers' nutritional knowledge and attitudes mediate seasonal shifts in children's diets
title Caregivers' nutritional knowledge and attitudes mediate seasonal shifts in children's diets
title_full Caregivers' nutritional knowledge and attitudes mediate seasonal shifts in children's diets
title_fullStr Caregivers' nutritional knowledge and attitudes mediate seasonal shifts in children's diets
title_full_unstemmed Caregivers' nutritional knowledge and attitudes mediate seasonal shifts in children's diets
title_short Caregivers' nutritional knowledge and attitudes mediate seasonal shifts in children's diets
title_sort caregivers nutritional knowledge and attitudes mediate seasonal shifts in children s diets
topic attitudes
children
trace elements
nutrition
seasonality
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/98259
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