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      Household food access and child malnutrition: results from the eight-country MAL-ED study

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          Abstract

          Background

          Stunting results from decreased food intake, poor diet quality, and a high burden of early childhood infections, and contributes to significant morbidity and mortality worldwide. Although food insecurity is an important determinant of child nutrition, including stunting, development of universal measures has been challenging due to cumbersome nutritional questionnaires and concerns about lack of comparability across populations. We investigate the relationship between household food access, one component of food security, and indicators of nutritional status in early childhood across eight country sites.

          Methods

          We administered a socioeconomic survey to 800 households in research sites in eight countries, including a recently validated nine-item food access insecurity questionnaire, and obtained anthropometric measurements from children aged 24 to 60 months. We used multivariable regression models to assess the relationship between household food access insecurity and anthropometry in children, and we assessed the invariance of that relationship across country sites.

          Results

          Average age of study children was 41 months. Mean food access insecurity score (range: 0–27) was 5.8, and varied from 2.4 in Nepal to 8.3 in Pakistan. Across sites, the prevalence of stunting (42%) was much higher than the prevalence of wasting (6%). In pooled regression analyses, a 10-point increase in food access insecurity score was associated with a 0.20 SD decrease in height-for-age Z score (95% CI 0.05 to 0.34 SD; p = 0.008). A likelihood ratio test for heterogeneity revealed that this relationship was consistent across countries (p = 0.17).

          Conclusions

          Our study provides evidence of the validity of using a simple household food access insecurity score to investigate the etiology of childhood growth faltering across diverse geographic settings. Such a measure could be used to direct interventions by identifying children at risk of illness and death related to malnutrition.

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          Most cited references17

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            Undernutrition as an underlying cause of child deaths associated with diarrhea, pneumonia, malaria, and measles.

            Previous analyses derived the relative risk (RR) of dying as a result of low weight-for-age and calculated the proportion of child deaths worldwide attributable to underweight. The objectives were to examine whether the risk of dying because of underweight varies by cause of death and to estimate the fraction of deaths by cause attributable to underweight. Data were obtained from investigators of 10 cohort studies with both weight-for-age category ( -1 SD) and cause of death information. All 10 studies contributed information on weight-for-age and risk of diarrhea, pneumonia, and all-cause mortality; however, only 6 studies contributed information on deaths because of measles, and only 3 studies contributed information on deaths because of malaria or fever. With use of weighted random effects models, we related the log mortality rate by cause and anthropometric status in each study to derive cause-specific RRs of dying because of undernutrition. Prevalences of each weight-for-age category were obtained from analyses of 310 national nutrition surveys. With use of the RR and prevalence information, we then calculated the fraction of deaths by cause attributable to undernutrition. The RR of mortality because of low weight-for-age was elevated for each cause of death and for all-cause mortality. Overall, 52.5% of all deaths in young children were attributable to undernutrition, varying from 44.8% for deaths because of measles to 60.7% for deaths because of diarrhea. A significant proportion of deaths in young children worldwide is attributable to low weight-for-age, and efforts to reduce malnutrition should be a policy priority.
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              Measuring household food insecurity: why it's so important and yet so difficult to do.

              Food insecurity is a daily reality for hundreds of millions of people around the world. Although its most extreme manifestations are often obvious, many other households facing constraints in their access to food are less identifiable. Operational agencies lack a method for differentiating households at varying degrees of food insecurity in order to target and evaluate their interventions. This chapter provides an overview of a set of papers associated with a research initiative that seeks to identify more precise, yet simple, measures of household food insecurity. The overview highlights three main conceptual developments associated with practical approaches to measuring constraints in access to food: 1) a shift from using measures of food availability and utilization to measuring "inadequate access"; 2) a shift from a focus on objective to subjective measures; and 3) a growing emphasis on fundamental measurement as opposed to reliance on distal, proxy measures. Further research is needed regarding 1) how well measures of household food insecurity designed for chronically food-insecure contexts capture the processes leading to, and experience of, acute food insecurity, 2) the impact of short-term shocks, such as major floods or earthquake, on household behaviors that determine responses to food security questions, 3) better measurement of the interaction between severity and frequency of household food insecurity behaviors, and 4) the determination of whether an individual's response to survey questions can be representative of the food insecurity experiences of all members of the household.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Popul Health Metr
                Popul Health Metr
                Population Health Metrics
                BioMed Central
                1478-7954
                2012
                13 December 2012
                : 10
                : 24
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Fogarty International Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, USA
                [2 ]Program in Global Disease Epidemiology and Control and Division of Human Nutrition, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, USA
                [3 ]Division of Women and Child Health, Aga Khan University, Karachi, Pakistan
                [4 ]International Centers for Diarrheal Disease Research, Matlab, Bangladesh
                [5 ]University of Venda, Thohoyandou, South Africa
                [6 ]Christian Medical College, Vellore, India
                [7 ]Institute of Medicine, Kathmandu, Nepal
                [8 ]University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway
                [9 ]Federal University of Ceara, Fortaleza, Brazil
                [10 ]Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care, School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Suite 9121 1800 Orleans Street, 21212, Baltimore, MD, USA
                Article
                1478-7954-10-24
                10.1186/1478-7954-10-24
                3584951
                23237098
                c6f2df39-9847-44ef-8c90-8741b7db0ef7
                Copyright ©2012 Psaki et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 21 March 2012
                : 13 November 2012
                Categories
                Research

                Health & Social care
                Health & Social care

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