What explains the fall in child stunting in Sub-Saharan Africa?
There have been steep falls in rates of child stunting in much of Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Using Demographic and Health Survey data, we document significant reductions in stunting in seven SSA countries in the period 2005–2014. For each country, we distinguish potential determinants that move in a...
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doaj-2a475f77cafd41ce98915bea7b44b82c2020-11-25T00:40:41ZengElsevierSSM: Population Health2352-82732019-08-018What explains the fall in child stunting in Sub-Saharan Africa?Leander R. Buisman0Ellen Van de Poel1Owen O'Donnell2Eddy K.A. van Doorslaer3Erasmus School of Health Policy & Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam, Netherlands; Corresponding author. Erasmus School of Health Policy & Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, PO Box 1738, 3000 DR, Rotterdam, Netherlands.Erasmus School of Health Policy & Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam, NetherlandsDepartment of Applied Economics, Erasmus School of Economics, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam, NetherlandsErasmus School of Health Policy & Management, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam, Netherlands; Department of Applied Economics, Erasmus School of Economics, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam, NetherlandsThere have been steep falls in rates of child stunting in much of Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Using Demographic and Health Survey data, we document significant reductions in stunting in seven SSA countries in the period 2005–2014. For each country, we distinguish potential determinants that move in a direction consistent with having contributed to the reduction in stunting from those that do not. We then decompose the change in stunting and in proximal determinants into a part that can be explained by changes in distal determinants and a residual part that captures the impact of unmeasured factors, such as vertical nutrition programs. We show that increases in coverage of child immunization, deworming medication and maternal iron supplementation often coincide with a fall in stunting. The magnitudes and directions of changes in two other proximal determinants -- age-appropriate feeding and diarrhea prevalence -- suggest that these have not been strong contributors to the fall in stunting. Utilization of maternity care emerges from the decomposition analysis as the most important distal determinant associated with reduced stunting, and also with increased coverage of iron supplementation, and, to a lesser extent, with child immunization and deworming medication. This circumstantial evidence is strong enough to warrant more detailed investigation of the extent to which maternity care is an effective channel through which to target further attacks on the blight of undernourished children. Keywords: Nutrition, Stunting, Decomposition, Sub-Saharan Africahttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352827318301502 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Leander R. Buisman Ellen Van de Poel Owen O'Donnell Eddy K.A. van Doorslaer |
spellingShingle |
Leander R. Buisman Ellen Van de Poel Owen O'Donnell Eddy K.A. van Doorslaer What explains the fall in child stunting in Sub-Saharan Africa? SSM: Population Health |
author_facet |
Leander R. Buisman Ellen Van de Poel Owen O'Donnell Eddy K.A. van Doorslaer |
author_sort |
Leander R. Buisman |
title |
What explains the fall in child stunting in Sub-Saharan Africa? |
title_short |
What explains the fall in child stunting in Sub-Saharan Africa? |
title_full |
What explains the fall in child stunting in Sub-Saharan Africa? |
title_fullStr |
What explains the fall in child stunting in Sub-Saharan Africa? |
title_full_unstemmed |
What explains the fall in child stunting in Sub-Saharan Africa? |
title_sort |
what explains the fall in child stunting in sub-saharan africa? |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
SSM: Population Health |
issn |
2352-8273 |
publishDate |
2019-08-01 |
description |
There have been steep falls in rates of child stunting in much of Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Using Demographic and Health Survey data, we document significant reductions in stunting in seven SSA countries in the period 2005–2014. For each country, we distinguish potential determinants that move in a direction consistent with having contributed to the reduction in stunting from those that do not. We then decompose the change in stunting and in proximal determinants into a part that can be explained by changes in distal determinants and a residual part that captures the impact of unmeasured factors, such as vertical nutrition programs. We show that increases in coverage of child immunization, deworming medication and maternal iron supplementation often coincide with a fall in stunting. The magnitudes and directions of changes in two other proximal determinants -- age-appropriate feeding and diarrhea prevalence -- suggest that these have not been strong contributors to the fall in stunting. Utilization of maternity care emerges from the decomposition analysis as the most important distal determinant associated with reduced stunting, and also with increased coverage of iron supplementation, and, to a lesser extent, with child immunization and deworming medication. This circumstantial evidence is strong enough to warrant more detailed investigation of the extent to which maternity care is an effective channel through which to target further attacks on the blight of undernourished children. Keywords: Nutrition, Stunting, Decomposition, Sub-Saharan Africa |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352827318301502 |
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