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(Journal of Nutrition. 1999;129:680-686.)
© 1999 The American Society for Nutritional Sciences


Article

Caregiver Behaviors and Resources Influence Child Height-for-Age in Rural Chad

France Bégin*3, Edward A. Frongillo, Jr.{dagger} and Hélène Delisle**

* Institute of Nutrition of Central America and Panama, Apartado Postal 1188, Guatemala, {dagger} Division of Nutritional Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-6301 and ** Department of Nutrition, University of Montréal, C. P. 6128, succursale A, Montréal, Québec, Canada H3C 3J7

The purpose of this study was to identify caregiver characteristics that influence child nutritional status in rural Chad, when controlling for socioeconomic factors. Variables were classified according to the categories of a UNICEF model of care: caregiving behaviors, household food security, food and economic resources and resources for care and health resources. Sixty-four households with 98 children from ages 12 to 71 mo were part of this study. Caregivers were interviewed to collect information on number of pregnancies, child feeding and health practices, influence on decisions regarding child health and feeding, overall satisfaction with life, social support, workload, income, use of income, and household food expenditures and consumption. Household heads were questioned about household food production and other economic resources. Caregiver and household variables were classified as two sets of variables, and separate regression models were run for each of the two sets. Significant predictors of height-for-age were then combined in the same regression model. Caregiver influence on child-feeding decisions, level of satisfaction with life, willingness to seek advice during child illnesses, and the number of individuals available to assist with domestic tasks were the caregiver factors associated with children's height-for-age. Socioeconomic factors associated with children's height-for-age were the amount of harvested cereals, the sources of household income and the household being monogamous. When the caregiver and household socioeconomic factors were combined in the same model, they explained 54% of the variance in children's height-for-age, and their regression coefficients did not change or only slightly increased, except for caregiver's propensity to seek advice during child illnesses, which was no longer significant. These results indicate that caregiver characteristics influence children's nutritional status, even while controlling for the socioeconomic status of the household.


KEY WORDS: • stunting • malnutrition • children • caregiver • behavior







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