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The Socio-Environmental Determinants of Childhood Malnutrition: A Spatial and Hierarchical Analysis

Sandler, Austin; Sun, Laixiang

The Socio-Environmental Determinants of Childhood Malnutrition: A Spatial and Hierarchical Analysis Thumbnail


Authors

Austin Sandler



Contributors

Andrea Vania
Editor

Abstract

Despite a remarkable reduction in global poverty and famines, substantial childhood malnutrition continues to persist. In 2017, over 50 million and 150 million young children suffered from acute malnutrition (wasting) and chronic malnutrition (stunting), respectively. Yet, the measurable impact of determinants is obscure. We evaluate proposed socio-environmental related determinants of stunting and wasting across Kenya and Nigeria and quantify their effectiveness. We combine health and demographic data from Kenya and Nigeria Demographic Health Surveys (2003, 2008–2009, 2013, 2014) with spatially explicit precipitation, temperature, and vegetation data. Geospatial and disaggregated data help to understand better who is at risk and where to target mitigation efforts. We evaluate the responsiveness of malnutrition indicators using a four-level random intercept hierarchical generalized logit model. We find that spatial and hierarchical relationships explain 28% to 36% of malnutrition outcome variation. Temporal variation in precipitation, temperature, and vegetation corresponds with more than a 50% change in malnutrition rates. Wasting is most impacted by mother’s education, family wealth, clinical delivery, and vaccinations. Stunting is most impacted by family wealth, mother’s education, clinical delivery, vaccinations, and children asymptomatic of fever, cough, or diarrhea. Remotely monitored climatic variables are powerful determinants, however, their effects are inconsistent across different indicators and locations.

Citation

Sandler, A., & Sun, L. (2024). The Socio-Environmental Determinants of Childhood Malnutrition: A Spatial and Hierarchical Analysis. Nutrients, 16(13), Article 2014. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16132014

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 19, 2024
Publication Date Jun 25, 2024
Deposit Date Jul 13, 2024
Publicly Available Date Jul 13, 2024
Journal Nutrients
Electronic ISSN 2072-6643
Publisher MDPI
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 16
Issue 13
Article Number 2014
DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16132014
Keywords DHS, stunting, Nigeria, Kenya, wasting, spatial, hierarchical, child malnutrition
Publisher URL https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/16/13/2014

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