학술논문

Intra-household correlations in maternal-child nutritional status in rural Guinea: implications for programme-screening strategies
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Bulletin of the World Health Organization. Jan-Feb, 1994, Vol. v72 Issue n1, p119, 9 p.
Subject
Guinea
Language
ISSN
0042-9686
Abstract
It is commonly assumed in public health practice that households in developing country settings are relatively homogeneous with respect to nutritional status. To the extent that this assumption is valid, nutritional assessments of mothers or individual children would provide an effective screening mechanism for household-level maternal--child nutritional risk. However, there has been no confirmation of the strength of intra-household correlations in nutritional status among women and children. Using data from a cross-sectional survey undertaken in 1990 in rural central Guinea, the present study investigates the nature of within-household relationships in maternal and child nutritional status and considers the implications for programme screening strategies. Mothers and their surviving children under 5 years of age are the focus of the analysis. Correlations between maternal and child nutritional levels are assessed and the performance of maternal--child nutritional indicators as screening tools for household nutritional risk are formally evaluated by analysing the sensitivity, specificity, and positive--negative predictive values of various indicators.
Introduction It is widely recognized that the collective state of ill-health among women and children in developing countries results from the joint influences of nutritional, biological, and social deprivation (1--3). [...]