Child spacing and parity progression
Journal article
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Publication Details
Subtitle: Implication for maternal nutritional status among women in Ekiti communities, Southwestern Nigeria
Publisher: Asian Network for Scientific Information (ANSINET)
Publication year: 2011
Journal: Pakistan Journal of Nutrition (1680-5194)
Volume number: 10
Issue number: 5
Start page: 485
End page: 491
Number of pages: 7
ISSN: 1680-5194
eISSN: 1994-7984
URL: https://scialert.net/fulltext/?doi=pjn.2011.485.491
Languages: English-United States (EN-US)
Abstract
The evolving dynamics that face maternal health in developing countries are worrisome. The achievement of the desirable Millennium Development Goals on maternal and child health in Ekiti will remain a mirage if women nutrition is compromised. Short birth spacing and high frequency of childbearing adversely affect maternal health through maternal depletion syndrome. This study was a cross-sectional house-hold survey where a stratified multi-stage sampling technique was used to select 1450 women of childbearing age as respondents. Body Mass Index (BMI) measurement was used as indicator of nutritional status. Results showed that the median birth interval was 33.0 months. Parity progression rate was higher among under-nourished mothers and births after an interval of less than 24 months (short birth interval) was accounted for by 38.3% of undernourished mothers. Taking into account of several potentially confounding variables, the Cox-regression model showed that mothers who left birth interval of less than 24 months are 2.0 (p<0.01), 4.4 (p<0.001), 5.71 (p<0.001) at risks of undernourishment than their counterparts who left 24- 35, 36-59 and 60+ months interval between births respectively. The strength of the association remains unchanged when the potential confounding variables were controlled. Births interval of at least 36 months will produce best health outcomes for mothers in terms of nutrition as evidence in this study. Strategies should be adopted to improve women knowledge on the effect of short birth spacing on maternal nutrition.
Keywords
Birth interval, parity progression, cox-regression model, maternal nutrition
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