Department of Health Systems and Policy, Institute of Public Health, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Gondar, Gondar, Ethiopia.
School of Public Health, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
Sci Rep. 2024 Jan 10;14(1):948. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-51081-5.
Severe wasting is the deadliest form of wasting caused by a lack of nutritious food and repeated attacks of illness. The World Health Assembly has agreed to reduce severe wasting to less than 5% and 3% by the end of 2025 and 2030. Significant disparities were observed worldwide in progress towards the goal. However, limited evidence of disparity in severe wasting was available in Ethiopia. Therefore, this study aimed to assess trends in socioeconomic and geographic inequalities in severe wasting among under-five children in Ethiopia between 2000 and 2019. The trend in socioeconomic and geographic inequality was assessed using the World Health Organization Health Equity Assessment Toolkit, employing both absolute and relative measures of inequality. Difference (D), ratio (R), slope index inequality (SII), relative concentration index (RCI), and population attributable ratio (PAR) were utilized to assess disparity across wealth, education, residence, and subnational regions. The 95% uncertainty interval (UI) was used to declare the significant change in inequality through time. The proportion of severe wasting increased from 3.8% to 4.7% between 2000 to 2005 and dropped to 2.9% in 2011 to remain constant until 2016. However, the proportion of severe wasting significantly declined to 1.1% in 2019. As indicated by RCI, significant fluctuation in wealth-related inequality was observed in all five survey years but a significant change in wealth-related inequality was observed in 2005 and 2019. Whereas the education-related inequality in RCI of severe wasting steadily increased from -8.8% in 2005 to -24.3% in 2019. And the change was significantly widened from 2011 to 2019. On the other hand, residence-related inequality of severe wasting was observed in 2000 in ratio, difference and PAR summary measures but disappeared in 2019. Between 2000 and 2016, regional inequalities in severe wasting fluctuated between 8.7 in 2005 to 5.9 in 2016 taking the difference as a measure of inequality. Overall, Wealth-related inequality has significantly widened over time with under five children from the richest households being less affected by severe wasting. Education-related inequality was not changed with under five children whose mothers had not attended formal education highly affected by severe wasting. Regional disparity in severe wasting is also exhibited in Ethiopia in all-round surveys with children from Addis Ababa being least affected whereas children from Somalia were highly affected by severe wasting. However, no significant disparity in the type of residence in severe wasting was revealed in Ethiopia. Therefore, special attention should be paid to under-five children living in the poorest households, whose mothers did not attend formal education and children living in Somalia region.
严重消瘦是由缺乏营养食物和反复患病引起的最致命的消瘦形式。世界卫生大会已同意将 2025 年底和 2030 年底严重消瘦减少到 5%和 3%以下。全球在实现这一目标方面存在显著差异。然而,在埃塞俄比亚,关于严重消瘦方面的差异,仅有有限的证据。因此,本研究旨在评估 2000 年至 2019 年间埃塞俄比亚五岁以下儿童严重消瘦在社会经济和地理方面不平等的趋势。利用世界卫生组织卫生公平评估工具包,采用绝对和相对不平等衡量标准,评估社会经济和地理不平等的趋势。使用差异 (D)、比率 (R)、斜率指数不平等 (SII)、相对集中指数 (RCI) 和人群归因比 (PAR) 来评估财富、教育、居住地和国家以下地区之间的差异。使用 95%置信区间 (UI) 来宣布随着时间的推移不平等状况的显著变化。严重消瘦的比例从 2000 年至 2005 年的 3.8%增加到 4.7%,然后在 2011 年下降到 2.9%,直到 2016 年保持不变。然而,2019 年严重消瘦的比例显著下降到 1.1%。如 RCI 所示,所有五个调查年份都观察到与财富相关的不平等明显波动,但在 2005 年和 2019 年观察到与财富相关的不平等显著变化。而严重消瘦的 RCI 中的教育相关不平等从 2005 年的-8.8%稳步增加到 2019 年的-24.3%。这种变化从 2011 年到 2019 年显著扩大。另一方面,2000 年观察到严重消瘦的居住地相关不平等在比值、差异和 PAR 综合衡量指标中,但在 2019 年消失了。2000 年至 2016 年,严重消瘦的区域不平等在 2005 年为 8.7,在 2016 年为 5.9,以差异作为衡量不平等的指标。总体而言,随着时间的推移,最富裕家庭的五岁以下儿童的财富相关不平等显著扩大,受严重消瘦的影响较小。教育相关不平等并没有随着五岁以下儿童母亲未接受正规教育而改变,这些儿童受严重消瘦的影响很大。在全面调查中,埃塞俄比亚也显示出严重消瘦的区域差异,来自亚的斯亚贝巴的儿童受严重消瘦的影响最小,而来自索马里的儿童受严重消瘦的影响最大。然而,埃塞俄比亚没有显示出在居住地类型方面存在严重消瘦的显著差异。因此,应特别关注生活在最贫困家庭、母亲未接受正规教育和生活在索马里地区的五岁以下儿童。