28 research outputs found
Factors associated with the health and nutritional status of children under 5 years of age in Afghanistan: family behaviour related to women and past experience of war-related hardships
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The present study was performed to assess, beyond socio-economic factors, independent associations between the health and nutritional status of children under 5 years old and (1) family behavioural factors related to women with regard to child care and (2) war-related experience by the household of hardships in Afghanistan.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The subjects were all children born during the previous 5 years from 1400 households in Kabul Province, Afghanistan and were selected by multistage sampling in March 2006. Height and weight measurements of the children and culturally sensitive interviews with their mothers were conducted by household visits. Child mortality, morbidity and nutritional status were evaluated. Four areas were assessed as variables for family behavioural factors related to women: education of mothers, child marriage of the mothers, maternal autonomy in obtaining healthcare for children and preference for a female physician. Hardships experienced by the family were examined by determining their satisfaction of basic material needs and by any experience of being forced to leave a preferred residence.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>A total of 2474 children from 1327 households completed the examinations and interviews; among them, 101 children were deceased by the time of the interview visits. Diarrhoea (32.5%) and acute respiratory infection (41.0%) were common child health problems and both emaciation (12.4%) and linear growth retardation (39.9%) were prevalent. Regardless of the influence of economic, demographic, family behavioural or hardships experience factors, a lack of maternal autonomy (79.1%) was associated with the occurrence of acute respiratory infection (odds-ratio = 1.72; 95% confidence interval = 1.23, 2.40), and linear growth retardation of children (odds-ratio = 1.38; 95% confidence interval = 1.01, 1.90); a lack of education of the mother (71.7%) and child marriage of the mothers (18.3%) were associated with diarrhoea (odds-ratio = 1.84; 95% confidence interval = 1.40, 2.41; odds-ratio = 1.46; 95% confidence interval = 1.08, 1.96, respectively); a shortage of basic material needs (59.1%) was associated with diarrhoea (odds-ratio = 1.35; 95% confidence interval = 1.08, 1.68); and migration inside the country (52.9%) was associated with underweight children (odds-ratio = 2.48; 95% confidence interval = 1.13, 5.44).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>A lack of education of the mothers, child marriage, lack of maternal autonomy, shortage of basic material needs and internal displacement showed independent and significant negative associations with child health and nutritional variables in this country that has experienced a long period of conflict.</p
Towards guidelines for selection of production performance indicators to measure sustainability performance
Plasma fractionation, a useful means to improve national transfusion system and blood safety: Iran experience
Dynamic stock modelling: a method for the identification andestimation of future waste streams and emissions based on past production and product stock characteristics
The implementation of Solar Home Systems as a poverty reduction strategy—A case study in Sri Lanka
Policy and practice: non-governmental organisations and the health delivery system for displaced children in khartoum, Sudan
Women's Political Representation in Nepal: An Experience from the 2008 Constituent Assembly
Teff straw characterization and utilization for chromium removal from wastewater: Kinetics, isotherm and thermodynamic modelling
Toward Integration: Managing the Divergence Between National Climate Change Interventions and Urban Planning in Ghana
Climate change issues have progressively been integrated into national development and policy frameworks in Ghana. The National Development Planning Commission, using guidelines for preparing medium-term development plans, encourages district, municipal, and metropolitan assemblies to give special considerations to climate change issues in their plan preparation processes. Consequently, this chapter explores the extent to which climate change issues have been integrated into urban development plans in Ghana. Using the Kumasi metropolis, the chapter compares national development documents with four urban development plans for the metropolis to establish convergence or divergence in climate change issues and interventions
