Spatial quantile regression with application to high and low child birth weight in Malawi

Abstract Background Child low and high birth weight are important public health problems. Many studies have looked at factors of low and high birth weight using mean regression. This study aimed at using quantile regression to find out determinants of low and high birth weight. Methods Spatial quant...

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Main Author: Alfred Ngwira
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-11-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-019-7949-9
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spelling doaj-01b689445f344c86a9cd484865456e5f2020-11-29T12:02:28ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582019-11-0119111110.1186/s12889-019-7949-9Spatial quantile regression with application to high and low child birth weight in MalawiAlfred Ngwira0Department of Basic Sciences, Lilongwe University of Agriculture and Natural ResourcesAbstract Background Child low and high birth weight are important public health problems. Many studies have looked at factors of low and high birth weight using mean regression. This study aimed at using quantile regression to find out determinants of low and high birth weight. Methods Spatial quantile regression models at 0.05 and 0.95 percentiles of birth weight were fitted to 13,087 children birth weight in kilograms using Malawi demographic health survey data of 2010 study. Full Bayesian method by integrated nested Laplace approximations (INLA) was used to estimate the model. Second order random walk priors were assigned for mother age and antenatal visits for pregnancy while Gaussian markov random field prior was used for district of the child. Results Residual spatial patterns reveal areas in the southern region promoting high birth weight while areas in the central and northern region promote low birth weight. Most fixed effects findings are consistent with the literature. Richest family, normal mother body mass index (BMI), mother over weight (BMI > 25 kg/m2), birth order 2–3, mother secondary education and height (≥150 cm) negate low birth weight while weight 45–70 kg promote low birth weight. Birth order category 6+, mother height (≥150 cm) and poor wealth quintile, promote high birth weight, while richer and richest wealth quintiles and education categories: primary, secondary, and higher, and mother overweight (BMI > 25 kg/m2) reduce high birth weight. Antenatal visits for pregnancy reduce both low and high birth weight. Conclusion Strategies to reduce low and high birth weight should simultaneously address mother education, weight gain during pregnancy and poverty while targeting areas increasing low and high birth weight.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-019-7949-9SpatialQuantileBayesianINLA
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alfred Ngwira
spellingShingle Alfred Ngwira
Spatial quantile regression with application to high and low child birth weight in Malawi
BMC Public Health
Spatial
Quantile
Bayesian
INLA
author_facet Alfred Ngwira
author_sort Alfred Ngwira
title Spatial quantile regression with application to high and low child birth weight in Malawi
title_short Spatial quantile regression with application to high and low child birth weight in Malawi
title_full Spatial quantile regression with application to high and low child birth weight in Malawi
title_fullStr Spatial quantile regression with application to high and low child birth weight in Malawi
title_full_unstemmed Spatial quantile regression with application to high and low child birth weight in Malawi
title_sort spatial quantile regression with application to high and low child birth weight in malawi
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Abstract Background Child low and high birth weight are important public health problems. Many studies have looked at factors of low and high birth weight using mean regression. This study aimed at using quantile regression to find out determinants of low and high birth weight. Methods Spatial quantile regression models at 0.05 and 0.95 percentiles of birth weight were fitted to 13,087 children birth weight in kilograms using Malawi demographic health survey data of 2010 study. Full Bayesian method by integrated nested Laplace approximations (INLA) was used to estimate the model. Second order random walk priors were assigned for mother age and antenatal visits for pregnancy while Gaussian markov random field prior was used for district of the child. Results Residual spatial patterns reveal areas in the southern region promoting high birth weight while areas in the central and northern region promote low birth weight. Most fixed effects findings are consistent with the literature. Richest family, normal mother body mass index (BMI), mother over weight (BMI > 25 kg/m2), birth order 2–3, mother secondary education and height (≥150 cm) negate low birth weight while weight 45–70 kg promote low birth weight. Birth order category 6+, mother height (≥150 cm) and poor wealth quintile, promote high birth weight, while richer and richest wealth quintiles and education categories: primary, secondary, and higher, and mother overweight (BMI > 25 kg/m2) reduce high birth weight. Antenatal visits for pregnancy reduce both low and high birth weight. Conclusion Strategies to reduce low and high birth weight should simultaneously address mother education, weight gain during pregnancy and poverty while targeting areas increasing low and high birth weight.
topic Spatial
Quantile
Bayesian
INLA
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-019-7949-9
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