Reyes Hortensia, Pérez-Cuevas Ricardo, Sandoval Araceli, Castillo Raúl, Santos José Ignacio, Doubova Svetlana V, Gutiérrez Gonzalo
Unidad de Investigación Epidemiológica y en Servicios de Salud, Centro Médico Nacional Siglo XXI, Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, México City, México.
BMC Public Health. 2004 Nov 30;4:57. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-4-57.
Malnutrition in children can be a consequence of unfavourable socioeconomic conditions. However, some families maintain adequate nutritional status in their children despite living in poverty. The aim of this study was to ascertain whether family-related factors are determinants of stunting in young Mexican children living in extreme poverty, and whether these factors differ between rural or urban contexts.
A case-control study was conducted in one rural and one urban extreme poverty level areas in Mexico. Cases comprised stunted children aged between 6 and 23 months. Controls were well-nourished children. Independent variables were defined in five dimensions: family characteristics; family income; household allocation of resources and family organisation; social networks; and child health care. Information was collected from 108 cases and 139 controls in the rural area and from 198 cases and 211 controls in the urban area. Statistical analysis was carried out separately for each area; unconditional multiple logistic regression analyses were performed to obtain the best explanatory model for stunting.
In the rural area, a greater risk of stunting was associated with father's occupation as farmer and the presence of family networks for child care. The greatest protective effect was found in children cared for exclusively by their mothers. In the urban area, risk factors for stunting were father with unstable job, presence of small social networks, low rate of attendance to the Well Child Program activities, breast-feeding longer than six months, and two variables within the family characteristics dimension (longer duration of parents' union and migration from rural to urban area).
This study suggests the influence of the family on the nutritional status of children under two years of age living in extreme poverty areas. Factors associated with stunting were different in rural and urban communities.Therefore, developing and implementing health programs to tackle malnutrition should take into account such differences that are consequence of the social, economic, and cultural contexts in which the family lives.
儿童营养不良可能是不利的社会经济状况导致的结果。然而,一些家庭尽管生活贫困,仍能使子女保持充足的营养状况。本研究的目的是确定与家庭相关的因素是否为生活在极端贫困中的墨西哥幼儿发育迟缓的决定因素,以及这些因素在农村或城市环境中是否存在差异。
在墨西哥的一个农村和一个城市极端贫困地区开展了一项病例对照研究。病例组为6至23个月大的发育迟缓儿童。对照组为营养良好的儿童。自变量从五个维度进行定义:家庭特征;家庭收入;家庭资源分配与家庭组织;社会网络;以及儿童保健。在农村地区收集了108例病例和139例对照的信息,在城市地区收集了198例病例和211例对照的信息。对每个地区分别进行统计分析;进行无条件多因素逻辑回归分析以获得发育迟缓的最佳解释模型。
在农村地区,发育迟缓风险增加与父亲为农民的职业以及存在儿童照料家庭网络有关。在仅由母亲照料的儿童中发现了最大的保护作用。在城市地区,发育迟缓的风险因素包括父亲工作不稳定、社会网络小、参加儿童健康计划活动的比例低、母乳喂养超过六个月,以及家庭特征维度内的两个变量(父母婚姻持续时间较长和从农村迁移到城市地区)。
本研究表明家庭对生活在极端贫困地区的两岁以下儿童营养状况的影响。农村和城市社区与发育迟缓相关的因素有所不同。因此,制定和实施应对营养不良的健康计划应考虑到这些因家庭所处社会、经济和文化背景而产生的差异。