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A. J. D. Barros, C. Ronsmans, H. Axelson, E. Loaiza, A. D. Bertoldi, G. V. A. França, J. Bryce, J. T. Boerma, and C. G. Victora, “Equity in maternal, newborn, and child health interventions in Countdown to 2015: a retrospective review of survey data from 54 countries.,” Lancet, vol. 379, no. 9822, pp. 1225-33, Mar. 2012.

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Article

Socio-economic Inequity of Malnutrition among Under-Five Children and Women at Reproductive Age in Bangladesh

1Health Economics & Financing Research Group, Centre for Equity and Health Systems, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, Dhaka, Bangladesh

2Food Security Nutritional Surveillance Project, Helen Keller International, Bangladesh

3Department of Public Health, University of South Asia, Dhaka, Bangladesh


World Journal of Nutrition and Health. 2013, Vol. 1 No. 1, 13-17
DOI: 10.12691/jnh-1-1-3
Copyright © 2013 Science and Education Publishing

Cite this paper:
Sayem Ahmed, Md. Mehedi Hasan, Wahid Ahmed, Md. Atiqul Hoque Chowdhury. Socio-economic Inequity of Malnutrition among Under-Five Children and Women at Reproductive Age in Bangladesh. World Journal of Nutrition and Health. 2013; 1(1):13-17. doi: 10.12691/jnh-1-1-3.

Correspondence to: Sayem  Ahmed, Health Economics & Financing Research Group, Centre for Equity and Health Systems, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, Dhaka, Bangladesh. Email: sayemahmed@icddrb.org

Abstract

Poor nutritional status of children is a major public health problem throughout the developing world and is the underlying cause for 35% of child deaths and 11% of the total global disease burden. The global burden of childhood mortality, morbidity, and under nutrition is now increasingly concentrated in the most deprived and underserved populations within countries. The aim of this study was to investigate the socioeconomic differences of malnutrition of the under-five children and women at reproductive age in Bangladesh. Bangladesh Demographic Health Survey data 2011 were used for this study. Three of the most commonly used anthropometric indicators (weight-for-height, height-for-age, and weight-for-age) have been constructed for under five children. Asset quintiles have been constructed using principal component analysis technique. The concentration index (CI) has been estimated to show the direction of nutritional status across asset quintiles. Using concentration index it is found that child and mother malnutrition were more common in poor quintiles compared to rich quintiles. Stunting (CI = −30.127) and underweight (CI = −0.163) among child and thin/malnutrition condition (CI = −0.241) among women were highly pro-poor. On the other hand overweight condition (CI = −0.376) among women was highly pro-rich. Beside this urban and rural differential showed that rural area was better-off than urban area in terms of inequity in nutritional indicators of children and women. Even stunting and wasting is more prevalent among poorest children in urban area than children of same economic group in rural area. The community level nutritional intervention strategies aiming at reducing socioeconomic inequality should be taken for addressing large inequity in nutritional status of children and women in Bangladesh.

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