Conflict and Climate Factors and the Risk of Child Acute Malnutrition Among Children Aged 24-59 Months: A Comparative Analysis of Kenya, Nigeria, and Uganda.

IF 1.1 Q3 DEMOGRAPHY Spatial Demography Pub Date : 2022-08-01 Epub Date: 2022-02-01 DOI:10.1007/s40980-021-00102-w
Kathryn Grace, Andrew Verdin, Molly Brown, Maryia Bakhtsiyarava, David Backer, Trey Billing
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Abstract

Acute malnutrition affects a sizeable number of young children around the world, with serious repercussions for mortality and morbidity. Among the top priorities in addressing this problem are to anticipate which children tend to be susceptible and where and when crises of high prevalence rates would be likely to arise. In this article, we highlight the potential role of conflict and climate conditions as risk factors for acute malnutrition, while also assessing other vulnerabilities at the individual- and household-levels. Existing research reflects these features selectively, whereas we incorporate all the features into the same study. The empirical analysis relies on integration of health, conflict, and environmental data at multiple scales of observation to focuses on how local conflict and climate factors relate to an individual child's health. The centerpiece of the analysis is data from the Demographic and Health Surveys conducted in several different cross-sectional waves covering 2003-2016 in Kenya, Nigeria, and Uganda. The results obtained from multi-level statistical models indicate that in Kenya and Nigeria, conflict is associated with lower weight-for-height scores among children, even after accounting for individual-level and climate factors. In Nigeria and Kenya, conflict lagged 1-3 months and occurring within the growing season tends to reduce WHZ scores. In Uganda, however, weight-for-height scores are primarily associated with individual-level and household-level conditions and demonstrate little association with conflict or climate factors. The findings are valuable to guide humanitarian policymakers and practitioners in effective and efficient targeting of attention, interventions, and resources that lessen burdens of acute malnutrition in countries prone to conflict and climate shocks.

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冲突和气候因素与 24-59 个月大儿童急性营养不良的风险:肯尼亚、尼日利亚和乌干达的比较分析。
急性营养不良影响着全世界相当多的幼儿,对死亡率和发病率造成严重影响。解决这一问题的当务之急是预测哪些儿童容易受到影响,以及高发病率危机可能在何时何地出现。在本文中,我们强调了冲突和气候条件作为急性营养不良风险因素的潜在作用,同时还评估了个人和家庭层面的其他脆弱性。现有研究选择性地反映了这些特征,而我们则将所有特征纳入同一研究中。实证分析依赖于在多个观察尺度上整合健康、冲突和环境数据,重点关注当地冲突和气候因素与儿童个人健康的关系。分析的核心是肯尼亚、尼日利亚和乌干达在 2003-2016 年期间进行的不同横截面人口与健康调查的数据。多层次统计模型得出的结果表明,在肯尼亚和尼日利亚,即使考虑了个人层面和气候因素,冲突也与儿童较低的体重身高分数相关。在尼日利亚和肯尼亚,滞后 1-3 个月且发生在生长季节的冲突往往会降低 WHZ 分数。然而,在乌干达,身高体重评分主要与个人和家庭条件有关,与冲突或气候因素的关系不大。这些研究结果对于指导人道主义政策制定者和实践者有效、高效地确定关注目标、干预措施和资源,减轻易受冲突和气候冲击国家的急性营养不良负担具有重要价值。
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Spatial Demography
Spatial Demography DEMOGRAPHY-
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期刊介绍: Spatial Demography focuses on understanding the spatial and spatiotemporal dimension of demographic processes.  More specifically, the journal is interested in submissions that include the innovative use and adoption of spatial concepts, geospatial data, spatial technologies, and spatial analytic methods that further our understanding of demographic and policy-related related questions. The journal publishes both substantive and methodological papers from across the discipline of demography and its related fields (including economics, geography, sociology, anthropology, environmental science) and in applications ranging from local to global scale. In addition to research articles the journal will consider for publication review essays, book reviews, and reports/reviews on data, software, and instructional resources.
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