Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Aceso Global Health Consultants PTE Ltd., Singapore, Singapore.
PLoS One. 2021 Oct 15;16(10):e0257797. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0257797. eCollection 2021.
Respiratory Tract Infections (RTIs) and Gastro-Intestinal (GI) infections are the leading causes of child mortality and morbidity. This study investigates the associations between the individual, household and slum-level determinants of children's health and vulnerability to RTIs and GI infections in peri-urban slums in India; an area of research interest at the Childhood Infections and Pollution Consortium.
The 2015-16 Indian National Family Health Survey was used for data analysis on children aged 0-5 years. NFHS-4 includes data on slums in eight Indian cities, including Delhi, Meerut, Kolkata, Indore, Mumbai, Nagpur, Hyderabad, Chennai. The outcome variables, having fever and cough (FeCo) and diarrhoea in the last two weeks, were used to define the phenotype of infections; for this analysis fever and cough were measures of RTIs and diarrhoea was used to measure GI infections. Exposures considered in this study include variables at the individual, household and slum level and were all informed by existing literature. Multilevel models were used to estimate the association between exposures and outcomes variables; a prior of Cauchy distribution with a scale of 2.5 was selected when building the multilevel logistic models.
The total sample size of the number of children included in the analysis was n = 1,424. Data was imputed to account for missingness, and the original and imputed sample showing similar distributions. Results showed that diarrhoea and FeCo were both found to be more present in younger children than older children by a few months. In fixed effects, the odds of developing FeCo were higher if the mother perceives the child was born smaller than average (AOR 4.41, 1.13-17.17, P<0.05) at individual level. On the other hand, the odds of the diarrhoea outcome were lower if the child was older (AOR 0.97, 0.96-0.98, P<0.05) at individual level, and household's water source was public tap or standpipe (AOR 0.54, 0.31-0.96, P<0.05) at household level.
The determinants of health, both social and related to health care, at all levels demonstrated linkages to child morbidity in RTIs and GI infections. The empirical evidence highlights the need for contextualised ideas at each level, including one health approach when designing interventions to improve child health.
呼吸道感染(RTIs)和胃肠道(GI)感染是导致儿童死亡和发病的主要原因。本研究调查了个体、家庭和贫民窟层面的决定因素与印度城乡结合部贫民窟儿童 RTIs 和 GI 感染易感性之间的关系;这是儿童传染病和污染联盟的一个研究兴趣领域。
使用 2015-16 年印度国家家庭健康调查的数据对 0-5 岁儿童进行分析。NFHS-4 包括印度八个城市的贫民窟数据,包括德里、密鲁特、加尔各答、印多尔、孟买、那格浦尔、海德拉巴、钦奈。发热和咳嗽(FeCo)和腹泻(FeCo)是在过去两周内定义感染表型的两个结果变量;在此分析中,发热和咳嗽是 RTIs 的衡量标准,腹泻用于衡量 GI 感染。本研究考虑的暴露因素包括个体、家庭和贫民窟层面的变量,均由现有文献提供信息。多水平模型用于估计暴露因素与结局变量之间的关系;在构建多水平逻辑模型时,选择了柯西分布的先验概率为 2.5。
分析中纳入的儿童总数为 n=1424。对数据进行了插补以处理缺失值,原始样本和插补样本的分布相似。结果表明,与年龄较大的儿童相比,年龄较小的儿童腹泻和 FeCo 的发病率更高。在固定效应中,如果母亲认为孩子出生时小于平均水平(个体水平,OR4.41,1.13-17.17,P<0.05),则发生 FeCo 的几率更高。另一方面,如果孩子年龄较大(个体水平,OR0.97,0.96-0.98,P<0.05),家庭的水源是公共水龙头或立管(家庭水平,OR0.54,0.31-0.96,P<0.05),腹泻的几率则较低。
所有层面的健康决定因素,包括社会因素和与医疗保健相关的因素,都与 RTIs 和 GI 感染儿童的发病有关。实证证据强调需要在每个层面上提出具体的想法,包括在设计改善儿童健康的干预措施时采用一个健康的方法。