Shared environments: a multilevel analysis of community context and child nutritional status in Bangladesh

Type Journal Article - Public health nutrition
Title Shared environments: a multilevel analysis of community context and child nutritional status in Bangladesh
Author(s)
Volume 14
Issue 6
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2011
Page numbers 951
URL http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21310102
Abstract
Objective: The goal of the present study was to examine the influence of community environment on the nutritional status (weight-for-age and height-for-age) of children (aged 0–59 months) in Bangladesh. In addition, we tested the association between specific characteristics of community environments and child nutritional status.
Design: Cross-sectional survey.
Setting: The data are from the nationally representative 2004 Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey.
Subjects: Respondents were ever-married women (aged 15–49 years) and their children (n 5731), residing in 361 communities. Child nutritional outcomes are physical measurements of weight-for-age and height-for-age in sd units. We considered the following attributes of community environments potentially related to child nutrition: (i) community water and sanitation infrastructure; (ii) availability of community health and education services; (iii) community employment and social participation; and (iv) education level of the community.
Results: Multilevel regression analysis showed that the spatial distribution of maternal and child covariates did not entirely explain the between-community variation in child nutritional status. The education level of the community emerged as the strongest community-level predictor of child height-for-age (highest v. lowest tertile, ß = 0·18 (se 0·07)) and weight-for-age (highest v. lowest tertile, ß = 0·21 (se 0·06)). In the height-for-age model, community employment and social participation also emerged as being statistically significant (highest v. lowest tertile, ß = 0·13 (se = 0·06)).
Conclusions: The community environment influences child nutrition in Bangladesh, and maternal- and child-level covariates may fail to capture the entire influence of communities. Interventions to reduce child undernutrition in developing countries should take into consideration the wider community context.

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