Barman Debjani, Vadrevu Lalitha
IIHMR University, Jaipur, India.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2016 Nov 15;16(Suppl 7):622. doi: 10.1186/s12913-016-1862-z.
Membership in community groups and a sense of community cohesion may facilitate collective action in mobilizing resources towards better health outcomes. This paper explores the relationship of these factors, along with individual level socio-economic variables, to dietary adequacy among children below 6 years of age, a proximate determinant of child malnutrition.
We conducted a cross-sectional survey in Patharpratima block of the Sundarbans in West Bengal, India, using a two-stage, 30 cluster random sampling design. In 1200 sampled households, we used a structured questionnaire to interview mothers of children below 6 years of age on their child's nutritional intake. We also interviewed household heads to assess perceived community cohesion using a nine item scale, membership in any community self-help organization, and other socio-economic determinants. We used a logistic regression model to assess their association with a minimum acceptable diet among children between 6 months to 6 years.
Only 9.33 % children between 6 and 71 months of age received a minimum acceptable diet. With each increase in the perceived community cohesion score (scale 0-9), a child is 1.31 times more likely to have minimum acceptable diet (95 % CI 1.14, 1.50). The odds of minimum acceptable diet were also higher among children whose mothers had primary education (2.09, 95 % CI 1.03, 2.94) as compared to illiterate mothers and in households with surplus food resources (2.72, 95 % CI 1.32, 5.58) as compared to those without surplus or deficit. In contrast, registering at an Anganwadi (government early child development) centre (odds ratio 1.34 95 % CI 0.69, 2.60) and community membership (odds ratio 0.93, 95 % CI 0.59, 1.46) were not associated with minimum acceptable diet.
The results are consistent with what is known about the importance of maternal education and access to food resources in ensuring that children have a minimum acceptable diet. Perceived community cohesion seems to play a positive role in children's diets. Further research needs to clarify which community characteristics and services are the most relevant, how they can better support children's diets, and how interventions can strengthen these community characteristics and services.
社区团体成员身份和社区凝聚力感可能有助于集体行动,动员资源以实现更好的健康结果。本文探讨了这些因素以及个体层面的社会经济变量与6岁以下儿童饮食充足性之间的关系,饮食充足性是儿童营养不良的一个直接决定因素。
我们在印度西孟加拉邦孙德尔本斯的Patharpratima街区进行了一项横断面调查,采用两阶段、30个聚类的随机抽样设计。在1200个抽样家庭中,我们使用结构化问卷对6岁以下儿童的母亲进行访谈,了解其孩子的营养摄入情况。我们还访谈了户主,使用一个包含九个项目的量表来评估感知到的社区凝聚力、是否是任何社区自助组织的成员以及其他社会经济决定因素。我们使用逻辑回归模型来评估它们与6个月至6岁儿童的最低可接受饮食之间的关联。
在6至71个月大的儿童中,只有9.33%的儿童摄入了最低可接受饮食。随着感知到的社区凝聚力得分(0至9分)每增加一分,儿童摄入最低可接受饮食的可能性增加1.31倍(95%置信区间为1.14, 1.50)。与文盲母亲相比,母亲接受过小学教育的儿童摄入最低可接受饮食的几率也更高(2.09,95%置信区间为1.03, 2.94);与没有剩余或短缺食物资源的家庭相比,有剩余食物资源的家庭中儿童摄入最低可接受饮食的几率更高(2.72,95%置信区间为1.32, 5.58)。相比之下,在安格瓦迪(政府早期儿童发展)中心登记(优势比为1.34,95%置信区间为0.69, 2.60)和社区成员身份(优势比为0.93,95%置信区间为0.59, 1.46)与最低可接受饮食无关。
研究结果与已知的母亲教育和获取食物资源在确保儿童获得最低可接受饮食方面的重要性相符。感知到的社区凝聚力似乎在儿童饮食方面发挥着积极作用。需要进一步研究来阐明哪些社区特征和服务最为相关、它们如何能更好地支持儿童饮食,以及干预措施如何能加强这些社区特征和服务。