Hong Rathavuth, Hong Rathmony
Department of Global Health, School of Public Health and Health Services, George Washington University, 2175 K Street NW, Washington, DC 20037, USA.
Food Nutr Bull. 2007 Mar;28(1):59-66. doi: 10.1177/156482650702800107.
Many people in developing countries are still struggling to emerge from the realm of extreme poverty, where economic improvements tend to benefit a small, affluent group of the population and cause growing inequality in health and nutrition that affects the most vulnerable groups of the population, including women and children.
To examine how household and community economic inequality affects nutritional status in women using information on 6,922 nonpregnant women aged 15 to 49 years included in the 2000 Cambodia Demographic and Health Survey.
Nutritional status is defined with the use of the body-mass index (BMI). BMI less than 18.5 kg/m2 is defined as undernourishment. The household wealth index was calculated from household ownership of durable assets and household characteristics. Community wealth is an average household wealth index at the community level. Household and community economic inequalities were measured by dividing the wealth index into quintiles. The effects of household and community economic inequality were estimated by multilevel analysis.
Independently of community economic status and other risk factors, women in the poorest 20% of households are more likely to be undernourished than women in the richest 20% of households (RR = 1.63; p = .008). The results also show variation among communities in the nutritional status of women. Age, occupation, and access to safe sources of drinking water are significantly associated with women's nutritional status.
Improving household income and creating employment opportunities for women, in particular poor women, may be a key to improving the nutritional status of women in Cambodia.
发展中国家的许多人仍在努力摆脱极端贫困的境地,在这种情况下,经济改善往往惠及一小部分富裕人群,导致健康和营养方面的不平等加剧,影响到包括妇女和儿童在内的最弱势群体。
利用2000年柬埔寨人口与健康调查中6922名年龄在15至49岁的非孕妇女的信息,研究家庭和社区经济不平等如何影响妇女的营养状况。
营养状况通过身体质量指数(BMI)来定义。BMI低于18.5 kg/m²被定义为营养不良。家庭财富指数根据家庭耐用资产的拥有情况和家庭特征计算得出。社区财富是社区层面的家庭平均财富指数。家庭和社区经济不平等通过将财富指数划分为五等份来衡量。家庭和社区经济不平等的影响通过多层次分析进行估计。
独立于社区经济状况和其他风险因素,最贫困的20%家庭中的妇女比最富裕的20%家庭中的妇女更有可能营养不良(相对风险 = 1.63;p = 0.008)。结果还显示,不同社区的妇女营养状况存在差异。年龄、职业和获得安全饮用水的机会与妇女的营养状况显著相关。
提高家庭收入并为妇女,尤其是贫困妇女创造就业机会,可能是改善柬埔寨妇女营养状况的关键。