This paper presents a comprehensive empirical analysis of the factors affecting growth and psychological development of over 100 infants from birth to age 6 months in the Embu region of Kenya. The analysis was divided into four parts. First, infants' birth weight, and length and head circumference a
Modeling the effects of nutritional and socioeconomic factors on the growth and morbidity of Kenyan school children
β Scribed by Alok Bhargava
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 81 KB
- Volume
- 11
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1042-0533
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β¦ Synopsis
This paper estimates dynamic models for the height, head circumference, weight, and morbidity of approximately 110 Kenyan school children (6-9 years) in a multivariate longitudinal data framework. Dynamic models allow anthropometric dimensions to depend on the respective measurements in the previous period. The system of 4 equations specified for height, head circumference, weight, and morbidity incorporates the interrelationships among these variables; explanatory variables in the model consist of nutritional, socioeconomic, demographic, and environmental factors. The model parameters are estimated using the principle of maximumlikelihood, while controlling for the unobserved between-children differences. The main findings are, first, that calcium intakes are positively associated with height while protein and energy intakes are associated with weight. Vitamin A intakes are negatively associated with morbidity. Second, socioeconomic status plus the cash income of the household is a significant predictor of height, head circumference, and morbidity. Third, maternal height is positively associated with children's height and maternal body mass index (BMI) is positively associated with children's weight. Fourth, parents' scores on psychological tests, mother's age, and children's hemoglobin concentration are negatively associated with morbidity while mothers' morbidity is positively associated with children's morbidity. Implications of the modeling results are discussed.
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