Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-p9bg8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T15:35:24.350Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

What explains the large disparity in child stunting in the Philippines? A decomposition analysis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 October 2021

Valerie Gilbert T Ulep
Affiliation:
Philippine Institute for Development Studies, 18F Three Cyberpod Centris – North Tower, EDSA Cor. Quezon Avenue, Quezon City, Philippines Ateneo Policy Center, School of Government, Ateneo de Manila University, Quezon City, Philippines
Jhanna Uy
Affiliation:
Philippine Institute for Development Studies, 18F Three Cyberpod Centris – North Tower, EDSA Cor. Quezon Avenue, Quezon City, Philippines Health Sciences Program, School of Science and Engineering, Ateneo de Manila University, Quezon City, Philippines
Lyle Daryll Casas*
Affiliation:
Philippine Institute for Development Studies, 18F Three Cyberpod Centris – North Tower, EDSA Cor. Quezon Avenue, Quezon City, Philippines
*
*Corresponding author: Email [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Objective:

About one-third of under-five Filipino children are stunted, with significant socio-economic inequality. This study aims to quantify factors that explain the large gap in stunting between poor and non-poor Filipino children.

Design:

Using the 2015 Philippine National Nutrition Survey, we conducted a linear probability model to examine the determinants of child stunting and then an Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition to explain the factors contributing to the gap in stunting between poor and non-poor children.

Setting:

Philippines.

Participants:

1881 children aged 6–23 months participated in this study.

Results:

The overall stunting prevalence was 38·5 % with a significant gap between poor and non-poor (45·0 % v. 32·0 %). Maternal height, education and maternal nutrition status account for 26 %, 18 % and 17 % of stunting inequality, respectively. These are followed by quality of prenatal care (12 %), dietary diversity (12 %) and iron supplementation in children (5 %).

Conclusions:

Maternal factors account for more than 50 % of the gap in child stunting in the Philippines. This signifies the critical role of maternal biological and socio-economic circumstances in improving the linear growth of children.

Type
Research Paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Nutrition Society

Stunting is a marker of chronic malnutrition that affects 144 million children and causes significant disease burden worldwide(1,2) . Stunting is an important determinant of human capital and is a predictor of economic productivity(Reference Victora, Adair and Fall3Reference Chakravarty, Tatwadi and Ravi5). It is linked to poorer cognitive and educational outcomes(Reference Crookston, Dearden and Alder6,Reference Branca and Ferrari7) , lower wages(Reference LaFave and Duncan8,Reference Barker, Eriksson and Forsén9) , and poorer health in adult life(Reference Victora, Adair and Fall3,Reference Ravallion10) .

The Philippines is about to become an upper middle-income country, but stunting remains of very high public health significance(11). The average stunting rate in upper middle-income countries is only 14 %, while the Philippines hovers at 30 %, comparable to the poorest countries in the world(12). From 2000 to 2015, the country’s income per capita has increased by 3–4 % annually from 2000 to 2015(12), but stunting prevalence had barely improved during the same period with only a 0–1 % annual decline(12,13) . In contrast, many low- and middle-income countries have experienced a large decline even in countries notoriously known to have high burden(Reference Smith and Haddad14,Reference Buisman, Van de Poel and O’Donnell15) . The paradoxical relationship of economic growth and chronic malnutrition in the Philippines was against the backdrop of slow decline in poverty incidence and persistently high-income inequality. From 2000 to 2015, the percentage of the population below the poverty threshold hovered at 21 % to 25 % and the Gini coefficient at 0·46 to 0·42(16).

The high prevalence of child stunting is reinforced by the large disparity across socio-economic status. In 2015, about 36 % of under-five children from the bottom 20 % were stunted compared to 14 % among the richest 20 %(11). This 22-percentage point absolute difference between the poor (bottom 20 %) and non-poor (top 20 %) makes the Philippines one of the countries with the highest gap(1). Globally, the average gap is only 11 percentage points(17). Hence, understanding the drivers of stunting inequality could guide the appropriate design of nutrition and health interventions for the country. While studies have examined the correlates of stunting in the Philippines, the magnitude of the inequality and its drivers are not well-documented(Reference Capanzana, Aguila and Gironella18Reference Kandpal, Alderman and Friedman20).

This study aims to determine the magnitude of socio-economic inequality in stunting among 6–23 months Filipino children and to decompose the inequality into maternal, health and nutrition and socio-demographic factors. We used a nationally representative sample from the 2015 Philippine National Nutrition Survey (NNS).

Methods

Data

We used the 2015 Philippine NNS, a cross-sectional nationally representative survey covering all 17 regions and 80 provinces of the country. The NNS is the official data source on nutritional status, diet and other lifestyle-related risk factors in the Philippines. The survey employed a stratified three-stage sampling. The first stage of the sampling was the selection of the primary sampling unit which consisted of one village with at least 500 households each. From these sampling units, housing units were randomly selected from enumeration areas with 150–200 households. In the last stage, households were randomly selected. In total, 42 310 households with 17 702 children aged 0–60 months were sampled in the survey. All members of the household, including children, were then included to participate(11). We requested the expanded microdata from the Food and Nutrition Research Institute (FNRI). The details of the survey can be obtained here: http://enutrition.fnri.dost.gov.ph/site/uploads/2015_OVERVIEW.pdf.

Our analytical sample is 1881 children aged 6–23 months with complete records for anthropometric, socio-demographic, maternal and health data. We focused on the 6–23 age group only because this is the period when the sharp divergence in stunting prevalence occurs and the gap remained steady from 24 to 60th month. The figure in Appendix A shows the acceleration of the height-for-age Z-score between Q1 (poorest) and Q5 (richest), which starts at 6 months until 24 months.

Variables and measurements

Dependent variable

Height-for-age is the dependent variable of interest. In the 2015 NNS, the height of children under-2 years of age was measured in a recumbent position using a medical plastic infantometer and the standing height of those 2 years and above was measured using a stadiometer following the standard procedures. We estimated the height-for-age Z-score using the 2006 WHO Child Growth Standards. We categorised a child as stunted if their height-for-age Z-score is two sd below the median(21).

Socio-economic variable

We measured socio-economic status using a wealth index predicted from principal component analysis. The index is based on the ownership of wide-range assets (e.g. television, radio, refrigerator)(Reference Córdova22,23) . We categorised households as ‘poor’ if they belonged to the bottom 40 % in the wealth distribution otherwise non-poor. We considered the bottom 40 % of the wealth distribution as poor because it captures the portion of the population living below or just above estimated national poverty threshold. It also captures the prevalence of moderate and severe food insecurity, which is around 54 % in 2015(11).

Independent variables

To identify the independent variables to be included in our model, we adopted a framework from UNICEF (1990), which was refined by Fikru-Rizal and van Doorslaer (2019)(Reference Rizal and van Doorslaer24) (See Fig. 1). Under this framework, determinants of stunting are divided into non-modifiable and potentially modifiable factors. Non-modifiable factors include child age and sex(Reference Victora, de Onis and Hallal25). Mother’s height was also considered as a non-modifiable factor because some part of a child’s height is explained by genetic factors(Reference Sinha, Taneja and Chowdhury26). Modifiable factors were categorised as basic, underlying and immediate factors. Immediate factors, that is, dietary intake and child’s disease (orange box) are conduits by which the underlying determinants such as food insecurity, feeding practices, environment and healthcare services (green box) and the basic factors such as household and parental factors and regional or geographic factors affect the child nutritional status (red box).

Fig. 1 Conceptual Framework. Source: adapted from Rizal MF and van Doorslaer (2018)

Under household factors, we included the following variables: sex of the household head, maternal education, age (in years) and maternal BMI, as well as maternal blood pressure. We categorised maternal education into binary high school and non-high school graduate, and BMI using WHO cut-offs for underweight, normal, overweight and obese(27). For the maternal blood pressure, we categorised it into systolic blood pressure above and below 140 mmHg, since the cut-off for high blood pressure based on the 2020 Clinical Practice Guidelines on hypertension in the country(Reference Ona, Jimeno and Jasul28).

Under underlying factors, we included food insecurity, feeding practices, environment and healthcare factors. We measured food insecurity using a score predicted from principal component analysis of five (5) food security-related questions that were categorised into high, medium and low food insecurity. Under feeding practices, we considered three variables: minimum meal frequency (MMF) and Dietary Diversity Score (DDS). MMF, a proxy indicator for a child’s energy requirements, examines the number of times children received foods other than breast milk(29). MMF is met if a breastfed and non-breastfed children 6–23 months of age receive solid, semi-solid or soft foods or milk feed the minimum number of 4 times per day or more(29). DDS is an indicator on the quality of diet of the child. The DDS was defined as the number of unique food groups consumed by the child the previous day(Reference Krebs-Smith, Smiciklas-Wright and Guthrie30). Under environmental factors, we considered water, sanitation and hygiene variables such as handwashing practices, garbage disposal and availability of safe drinking water and sealed toilet facilities. Under healthcare factors, we determined the quality score using factor analysis using variables pertaining to services conducted during prenatal care such as anthropometric measurement, blood pressure treatment/diagnosis, blood test, urinalysis, ultrasound, micronutrient supplementation, tetanus toxoid and nutrition counseling; quality scores were categorised into low, medium and high. We determined whether the mother had postnatal care after giving birth, and whether the child was born in a health facility, and whether she had received three doses of DPT vaccine, received iron supplement, vitamin A supplement and had ever been dewormed. Appendix B outlines the operational definitions of independent variables.

Data analysis

We started with bivariate analyses by examining the distribution of dependent and independent variables by socio-economic status. We used t-test to determine the significant difference in stunting and other independent variables between poor and non-poor Filipino children. After bivariate analyses, we performed two (2) inferential statistics. First, we conducted a linear probability model (LPM) to examine the determinants of stunting. LPM is an ordinary least square regression using a binary dependent variable (that is, 1 = stunted; 0 = non-stunted). In our regression model, we controlled food insecurity, feeding practices, environment, healthcare factors, household and other non-modifiable factors outlined in Fig. 1. A coefficient in an LPM is interpreted as the change in the probability that Y = 1 (i.e. stunted) for a one-unit change of the independent variable of interest, holding everything else constant. We chose LPM over logistic regression model because it is computationally tractable and easier to interpret the coefficients(Reference Hippel31).

Second, we decomposed the difference in stunting prevalence between poor and non-poor children using the Oaxaca-Blinder method, an econometric tool used in labour economics to examine differential wage gaps between groups (e.g. by sex, race, residence)(Reference Mouteyica and Ephermia32). Oaxaca-Blinder has been used to assess disparities in health outcomes and healthcare utilisation expenditures(Reference Sen33Reference Jiménez-Rubio and Hernández-Quevedo39). The decomposition aims to quantify the contribution of selected predictors in explaining the gap in the prevalence of stunting between poor and non-poor children. The gap is decomposed into three parts: the first part is known as explained or endowment effect (E) and claimed the gap due to differences in the distribution of determinants between poor and non-poor; the second part is the unexplained or coefficient effect (C) and claimed the gap due to the differences in the effect of determinants between the groups and the third is an interaction between both—endowment effect and coefficient effect (CE)(Reference Das40). The intuition behind Oaxaca Blinder decomposition can be described by the subsequent equations.

The first step is to estimate a linear regression for both poor, p and non-poor, np children. The y, is the outcome variable, that is,i.e. stunted (2 sd below median). X’s are a vector of explanatory variables as listed in Appendix B.

(1) $${\gamma _i} = \beta {\chi ^\rho } + {\varepsilon _i},\,{\rm{and}}\,\beta {\chi ^{n\rho }} + {\varepsilon _i}$$

The gap between the mean outcomes, γnp, and γp is equal to:

(2) $${\gamma ^{np}} - {\gamma ^p} = {\beta ^{np}}{\chi ^{np}} - {\beta ^p}{\chi ^p}$$

where χnp and χp are vectors of explanatory variables evaluated at the means for the non-poor and poor, respectively. Assuming exogeneity, the error terms in Equation 1 are zero. Estimates of difference in the gap in mean outcomes were obtained by substituting sample means of the Xs and estimates of the parameter on β in Equation 1:

(3) $$\matrix{ {{\gamma ^{np}} - {\gamma ^p} = \Delta \chi {\beta ^{np}} + \Delta \chi {\beta ^p},{\mkern 1mu} \;\;{\rm{where}}{\mkern 1mu} \;\Delta \chi } \cr {\quad \quad \quad \;\;\;\;\; = {\chi ^{np}} - {\chi ^p}{\mkern 1mu} \; {\rm{and}} \; {\mkern 1mu} \Delta \beta = {\beta ^{np}} - {\chi ^p}} \cr} $$

The differences in Xs are weighted by the coefficients of the poor group and the differences in the coefficients are weighted by the Xs of the non-poor group; thus, partitioning the gap in outcomes between two groups:

(4) $${\gamma ^{np}} - {\gamma ^p} = \Delta \chi {\beta ^p} + \Delta \beta {\chi ^p} + \Delta \beta \Delta \chi = {\rm{E}} + {\rm{C}} + {\rm{CE}}$$

Whereas, the gap in outcome was from a gap in endowments (E), a gap in coefficients (C) and a gap arising from the interaction of endowments and coefficients (CE).

We conducted all our analysis using STATA 15 software, with statistical significance determined at P ≤ 0·05. We accounted for the complex design of the survey using provided survey weights in the microdata from Food and Nutrition Research Institute (FNRI).

Ethical standards disclosure

We used public use files of the DOST-FNRI NNS that was conducted according to the guidelines laid down in the Declaration of Helsinki, and all procedures involving research study participants were approved by the FNRI Institutional Ethics Review Committee (FNRIEC). Written informed consent was obtained from all subjects and their participation was strictly voluntary and they were allowed to withdraw their participation at any time without any consequence. The NNS data were available publicly, and the study participants were anonymous and thus did not require ethics approval.

Results

We included 1881 children with complete records for anthropometric, socio-demographic, maternal and health data aged 6–23 months in our analysis. Overall, 38·5 % of the children were stunted. The prevalence of stunting among Filipino children belonging to poor households (45 %) was significantly higher compared to non-poor children (32 %). Using a concentration curve to display disparity, Fig. 2 presents the degree of inequalities in stunting among 6–23 months children. The area below the 45° line of equality represents a progressive concentration curve, and the area below represents a regressive concentration curve. Given that the curve is above the diagonal, the stunting ‘burden’ in the Philippines is concentrated more heavily in the poor.

Fig. 2 Concentration curve presenting the degree of socio-economic inequality in stunting among children aged 6–23 months. Source: authors’ analysis of 2015 National Nutrition Survey

Table 1 shows the results of bivariate analyses between socio-economic status and dependent and independent variables. Children from poor households have lower probability to have a mother with at least high school education, mother with postnatal care after giving birth, to be food secure, to meet MMF and diversity, to have access to safe drinking water and improved toilet, to have timely and high-quality prenatal care, to have facility-based delivery, to have complete DPT vaccine and to have iron supplementation.

Table 1 Description of sample of children 6–23 months of age

* P < 0·05.

Table 2 shows the coefficients from the LPM, which is interpreted as the change in stunting for every one-unit change of the independent variable, ceteris paribus. Among non-modifiable and maternal factors, child’s sex, maternal height, maternal education and maternal nutrition status were significantly associated with stunting. Being a female decreases the probability of being stunted by 11 percentage points, and one (1) centimeter increase in maternal height decreases the probability of being stunted by 2 percentage points. Mothers without high school education increase their probability by 6 percentage point difference). Mothers with normal BMI are less likely to have stunted children compared to underweight (11 %) and overweight (16 %) counterparts.

Table 2 OLS regression coefficients using linear probability model

OLS, ordinary least squares, t statistics in parentheses.

* P < 0·05.

In terms of child feeding practices, MMF and DDS were significantly associated with child stunting. Children meeting their MMF decreases the probability of being stunted by 15 percentage points than children not meeting MMF, and one (1) unit increase in DDS decreases the probability of being stunted by 2 %. In terms of healthcare access, only high-quality prenatal care and iron supplementation were associated with stunting. Mothers having high-quality prenatal decreases the probability of their child being stunted by 6 % than those having low-quality prenatal care. On the other hand, children receiving iron supplementation decrease the probability of being stunted by 6 % than those who are not. We did not observe a significant association between stunting and other healthcare variables such as a place of delivery, postnatal care, vitamin A supplementation in children and DPT immunisation. Neither handwashing, type of toilet nor garbage dumping were significant.

Table 3 shows the results of the Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition model. It shows that children belonging to poor households had higher prevalence of stunting (45 %) than those belonging to non-poor households (32 %), a 13-percentage point absolute gap. The mean difference in stunting rates between the groups was significant (P value < 0·05). This gap accounted mostly for the explained part (about 82 %). The unexplained and interactions components contribute to the rest, but the unexplained and interaction terms are not statistically significant. Because of the lack of significance of the two parts, we will only present the endowment effect (E) of the gap.

Table 3 Summary result of Oaxaca decomposition analysis showing the mean differences in stunting rates

Table 4 shows how differences in the distribution of each determinant contributed separately to the first part of the gap (endowment effect). In particular, maternal education, height and BMI, iron supplementation in children, quality prenatal care and DDS were the significant contributors explaining the gap in stunting among children between the poor and non-poor. Maternal height contributed the highest, at 26 %, of the gap for stunting followed by maternal education, at 18 %, maternal BMI at 17 %, quality of prenatal care at 12 %, dietary diversity at 12 % and iron supplementation for children at 5 % (See Fig. 3).

Table 4 Contribution of each factor in poor and non-poor differentials in stunting (endowments or explained component)

*** P < 0·05.

Fig. 3 Contributions of each determinant to stunting inequality. Source: Authors’ analysis of 2015 National Nutrition Survey

Discussion

Child stunting in the Philippines is reinforced by the large inequality. We found a significant difference in the prevalence of poor and non-poor Filipino children during the critical period of 6–23 months (45·0 % v. 32·0 %; P value: 0·000). This gap in stunting prevalence accelerated sharply after the sixth month, which may be explained by the following factors.

In this study, we quantified wide range of socio-economic, maternal and child health factors that could explain the large gap in stunting prevalence between poor and non-poor children. Maternal education, height, and BMI, quality of prenatal care, diversity of child’s diet and iron supplementation for children were the significant contributors to the large disparity between poor and non-poor. Among the factors included in our decomposition model, maternal factors (that is, maternal nutrition and maternal education) account for more than 50 % of the gap. This suggests the role of maternal circumstance in perpetuating the large disparity in chronic malnutrition in the Philippines.

Maternal education explains about 18 % of the gap in child stunting. Social and cognitive factors could explain the role of education in the disparity of child stunting. Firstly, mothers with higher levels of education have more access to health information hence they have more knowledge of optimal child feeding and rearing practices. Secondly, education increases social capital(Reference Vikram41). If the child is ill or malnourished, the mother has access to information from her networks on how to treat the child. Thirdly, higher levels of education provide skills that are socially valued and give women a higher status, which raises self-confidence and eases social interaction with other high-status actors including health workers(Reference Joshi42). Fourthly, mothers with higher levels of education are associated with employment and income, which increases their demand for health and nutrition services(Reference Adedokun and Yaya43Reference Abdulraheem and Parakoyi45).

Maternal height explains about 26 % of the gap. While genetics plays an important role, non-genetic factors largely explain the disparity(Reference Perkins, Subramanian and Smith46). In poor settings, maternal height is a proxy for maternal nutrition practices(Reference Susser, Kirkbride and Heijmans47). Mothers with shorter stature are more likely to be poor and living in a constrained environment, hence complementary feeding is typically suboptimal(Reference Addo, Yaw and Yaw48). Short maternal height, which is more prevalent among the poor, also leads to low birth weight and eventually child stunting(Reference Nahar, Mascie-Taylor and Begum49Reference Aryastami, Shankar and Kusumawardani51). Mothers with shorter stature have decreased macronutrient and energy stores, and smaller reproductive organs, which limit fetal growth in utero leading to low birthweight(Reference Addo, Yaw and Yaw48).

BMI explains about 17 % of the gap. Empirical studies consistently show the association between maternal BMI and child stunting(Reference Tigga and Sen52Reference Martorell, Flores and Hickey55). The pathway in which underweight status affects subsequent anthropometric failure of the child starts in utero. The intergenerational transmission of maternal underweight gives infants a higher risk of low birth weight which is a manifestation of early age undernutrition, that may progress to childhood undernutrition(Reference Martorell, Flores and Hickey55,Reference Mbuya, Chideme and Chasekwa56) . In the Philippines, about 11 % of adult women were considered underweight, with large disparity across socio-economic status. The large percentage of poor women who are underweight reflects the limited access to high-quality and adequate diet and food supplement especially during pregnancy (i.e. balanced energy protein supplementation)(11).

At the same time, maternal overnutrition is also found to be associated as a risk factor contributing to the gap in stunting. Previous nutritional history of the mother may explain this because studies show that children who also experienced chronic malnutrition (i.e. stunting) at an early age may have an impact on their physiologic and metabolic characteristics that result in having higher chances of being overweight during adulthood(Reference Hoffman, Sawaya and Verreschi57,Reference Blankenship, Gwavuya and Palaniappan58) . An emerging phenomenon-that should also be examined is the presence of a double burden of malnutrition, wherein undernutrition and overnutrition coexist in the same household. Nutrition transition may also be related to this, wherein there is a change in lifestyle, dietary patterns and physical activity associated with economic developments(Reference Doak, Ponce and Vossenaar59,Reference Garrett and Ruel60) .

The quality of prenatal care explains 12 % of the gap. During prenatal care visits, mothers are given prenatal advice about child feeding and rearing practices, and they are provided with appropriate health and nutrition services such as micronutrient supplementation(61). Poor mothers are less likely to have access to high-quality prenatal care in primary care facilities because of financial and physical barriers(Reference Guliani, Sepehri and Serieux62Reference Gage and Calixte64). Although prenatal care services are subsidised by the Philippine government, other indirect expenses come with utilizing the service such as transportation expenses and other medications and supplements, which are not provided for free(Reference Guliani, Sepehri and Serieux62,Reference Arthur65,Reference Say and Raine66) . In the Philippines, more than 50 % of Filipinos seeking outpatient care use out-of-pocket financing(67).

DDS explain 12 % of the gap. Dietary diversity is an important component of dietary quality. Consumption of different food items and food groups is associated with improved nutritional adequacy of the diet(Reference Hatløy, Torheim and Oshaug68,Reference Torheim, Ouattara and Diarra69) . A high DDS increases the density of complimentary food, which is critical in ensuring optimal growth and development for the child(Reference Moursi, Arimond and Dewey70,Reference Khamis, Mwanri and Ntwenya71) . Consistent with other studies, poverty is associated with low DDS(Reference Issaka, Agho and Page72Reference Mayen, Marques-Vidal and Paccaud74). This reflects challenges on food insecurity in the country and poor knowledge on optimal child feeding and rearing practices(Reference Senarath, Agho and Akram73,Reference Aemro, Mesele and Birhanu75) . In the Philippines, 75 % of the poor (bottom 40 %) are moderate to severely food insecure(11), and 39 % of mothers do not have correct knowledge about the duration of complementary feeding(11).

Iron supplementation contributes to around 5 % of the gap. Provision of iron supplements was found to be associated with linear growth based on some evidence(Reference Awasthi, Das and Verma76Reference Angeles, Schultink and Matulessi79). Iron deficiency may lead to anaemia and may contribute to growth retardation especially in poor families(Reference Briend, Hoque and Aziz78). Iron deficiency anaemia is characterised by low haemoglobin concentration in the blood. This happens when the iron stores are utilised and depleted following the lack of intake of iron from food or supplements(77,Reference Özdemir80) . Poor children have limited access to iron supplements because of geographical and financial barriers in accessing primary care facilities, which is the entry point of health and nutrition interventions including micronutrient supplementation(Reference Pasricha, Biggs and Prashanth81,Reference Ray82) . In the Philippines, data from 2013 shows that among children under-five, prevalence of anaemia was the highest among the poorest (16·5 %) and lowest among the richest (7·9 %)(83).

Our findings are found to be consistent with studies conducted in other countries. Studies in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, India, Iran and Tanzania all reported that socio-economic disparity in stunting in their countries is observed, having higher stunting prevalence among the poor than their non-poor counterparts(Reference Huda, Hayes and El Arifeen84Reference Musheiguza, Mahande and Malamala88). Maternal factors, such as nutrition status (height and BMI) and maternal education, were consistent drivers of the socio-economic gap in stunting across the studies, parallel to our findings. Kumar and Singh (2013) noted the limited use of maternal health care services serves as the main driver of inequality, thus recommending access to these services to reduce the gap(Reference Kumar and Singh86).

The sharp acceleration of the gap in stunting prevalence between poor and non-poor after the sixth month is also consistent with other studies(Reference Bommer, Vollmer and Subramanian89,Reference Celhay, Martinez and Vidal90) . The nutritional requirement of the child increases after the period of exclusive breastfeeding (sixth month)(91); hence, those children coming from poor households were not able to cope as a function of a wide range of socio-economic, maternal and child health factors mentioned above (e.g. lack of access to quality prenatal care and healthcare services, diverse diet, food insecurity).

Reducing the gap in stunting requires interventions aimed to improve socio-economic circumstances of poor women and their access to essential health and nutrition services. This involves collaboration of different sectors such as education, health, social welfare, agriculture, etc. Reducing the drop-out rate in secondary education among the poor women can be improved through provision of innovative approaches (e.g. expansion of conditional cash transfers)(Reference Sampa, Jacobs and Musonda92Reference Reyes and Tabuga94). Teenage pregnancy is one of the common reasons why students drop-out of school. Hence, the provision of modern contraceptives to young adolescents should be explored(Reference Rosenberg, Pettifor and Miller9598). Mothers with formal education will be equipped with better knowledge on achieving optimal nutrition for her and their child(Reference Laksono, Wulandari and Ibad99,Reference Adnan and Muniandy100) and will have opportunities for better jobs and income, which will be a function of their capability to access essential health and nutrition services (e.g. prenatal care)(Reference Tekelab, Chojent and Smith101Reference Self and Grabowski103). Access to high-quality health and nutrition services can be improved by providing social protection among poor women and their families, through the expansion of social health insurance benefits and coverage(Reference Abrigo and Paqueo104106). The primary care system should be strengthened because it serves as the initial point of contact of individuals and families to the health system, giving access to vast essential health and nutrition services such as nutrition education for appropriate child feeding and rearing practices, balanced-energy protein supplementation for the mother and vitamin and mineral supplementation (e.g. iron supplements) beneficial for both the mother and the child. Currently, the Philippine Health Insurance Corporation, the country’s national health insurance, does not provide comprehensive primary care benefits.

In this study, we are able to use survey data that is nationally representative, which gives us a clear picture of the determinants of the stunting inequality in the country. Unlike other studies, which examined only a few determinants, our analysis examined a wide range of maternal and child health and socio-demographic indicators in our decomposition(Reference Mohammed, Muhammad and Pakzad85,Reference Almasian, Goodarzi and Asadi87) . There are limitations in the design and methods of the study. Our analytical sample focused only on a small number of children (n 1881) because we did not include those children aged 24–60 months and those children without complete anthropometric, socio-demographic, maternal and health data. For the measurement of socio-economic status, we used a proxy indicator of wealth index, which may not be able to account for the size and consumption of the household, and may not be able to capture income disruption(Reference Howe, Hargreaves and Huttly107). We are only able to measure the effects of relevant variables in the data, but the disparity could be influenced by other factors such as child’s exposure to illnesses, food/dietary intake and birth weight.

Conclusion

We have identified the factors that explain the large disparity in stunting between poor and non-poor Filipino children. Maternal factors (i.e. maternal education, maternal height and maternal nutrition status) account for more than 50 % of the inequality in child stunting. This reinforces the critical role of maternal socio-economic circumstances in improving the linear growth of children in addition to expanding the service coverage and quality of essential nutrition and health interventions such as prenatal care and appropriate complementary feeding.

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgements: We would like to acknowledge the Department of Health, National Nutrition Council, United Nations Children’s Fund, Philippine Institute for Development Studies, and the Food and Nutrition Research Institute for their inputs and unwavering support in this endeavor. Financial support: This work was supported by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), as part of the project ‘Addressing the Determinants of Stunting in the First 1000 d’. Authorship: V.U., J.U. and L.C. contributed to the design and implementation of the research and to the analysis of the results. V.U. took the lead in writing the manuscript. All authors provided critical feedback and helped shape the research, analysis and manuscript. Ethics of human subject participation: We used public use files of the DOST-FNRI NNS that was conducted according to the guidelines laid down in the Declaration of Helsinki and all procedures involving research study participants were approved by the FNRI Institutional Ethics Review Committee (FNRIEC). Written informed consent was obtained from all subjects and their participation was strictly voluntary, and they were allowed to withdraw their participation at any time without any consequence. The NNS data were available publicly and the study participants were anonymous and thus did not require ethics approval.

Conflict of interest:

There are no conflicts of interest.

Supplementary material

For supplementary material accompanying this paper visit https://doi.org/10.1017/S136898002100416X

References

UNICEF, WHO & The World Bank Group (2020) Joint Child Malnutrition Estimates: Levels and Trends in Child Malnutrition: Key Findings of the 2020 Edition. https://www.who.int/publications-detail-redirect/jme-2020-edition (accessed November 2020).Google Scholar
World Health Organization (2020) Key Facts in Malnutrition. https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/malnutrition (accessed November 2020).Google Scholar
Victora, C, Adair, L, Fall, C et al. (2008) Maternal and child undernutrition: consequences for adult health and human capital. Lancet 371, 340357.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Case, P & Paxson, C (2008) Stature and status: height, ability, and labor market outcomes. J Polit Econ 116, 499532.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chakravarty, N, Tatwadi, K & Ravi, K (2019) Intergenerational effects of stunting on human capital: where does the compass point? Int J Med Public Health 9, 105111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crookston, B, Dearden, K, Alder, S et al. (2011) Impact of early and concurrent stunting on cognition. Matern Child Nutr 7, 397409.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Branca, F & Ferrari, M (2002) Impact of micronutrient deficiencies on growth: the stunting syndrome. Ann Nutr Metab 46, Suppl. 1, 817.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
LaFave, D & Duncan, T (2016) Height and Cognition at Work: Labor Market Productivity in a Low Income Setting. NBER Working Paper Series 2290. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research. https://doi.org/10.3386/w22290 (accessed July 2021).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barker, D, Eriksson, J, Forsén, T et al. (2005) Infant growth and income 50 years later. Arch Dis Child 90, 272273.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ravallion, M (1990) Income effects on undernutrition. Econ Dev Cult Change 38, 489515.Google Scholar
Department of Science and Technology & Food and Nutrition Research Institute (2016) 2015 Facts and Figures: Anthropometry Survey. Taguig City, Philippines: Department of Science and Technology, FNRI.Google Scholar
The World Bank (2018) World Development Indicators. https://data.worldbank.org/indicator (accessed October 2020).Google Scholar
United Nations (2015) The 2030 Sustainable Development Goals. https://sdgs.un.org/goals (accessed October 2020).Google Scholar
Smith, L & Haddad, L (2015) Reducing child undernutrition: past drivers and priorities for the post-MDG era. World Dev 68, 180204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buisman, LR, Van de Poel, E, O’Donnell, O et al. (2019) What explains the fall in child stunting in sub-Saharan Africa? SSM Popul Health 8, 100384.Google ScholarPubMed
Philippine Statistics Authority (2015) Income Inequality by Period. https://openstat.psa.gov.ph/ (accessed June 2021).Google Scholar
UNICEF (2016) Situation Analysis of Children in the Philippines. https://www.unicef.org/philippines/media/556/file (accessed August 2020).Google Scholar
Capanzana, M, Aguila, D, Gironella, G et al. (2018) Nutritional status of children ages 0–5 and 5–10 years old in households headed by fisherfolks in the Philippines. Arch Public Health 76, 24.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rohner, F, Bradley, A, Grant, J et al. (2013) Infant and young child feeding practices in urban Philippines and their associations with stunting, anemia, and deficiencies of iron and vitamin A. Food Nutr Bull 34, Suppl. 2, S17S34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kandpal, E, Alderman, H, Friedman, J et al. (2016) A conditional cash transfer program in the Philippines reduces severe stunting. J Nutr 146, 17931800.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
WHO (2006) WHO Child Growth Standards. https://www.who.int/tools/child-growth-standards/standards/length-height-for-age (accessed November 2020).Google Scholar
Córdova, A (2009) Measuring Relative Wealth Using Household Asset Indicators and Principal Component Analysis (PCA). America Barometer Insights Series. Nashville: Latin American Public Opinion Project, Vanderbilt University.Google Scholar
USAID (2020) The DHS Program: Wealth Index. https://dhsprogram.com/topics/wealth-index/ (accessed November 2020).Google Scholar
Rizal, MF & van Doorslaer, E (2019) Explaining the fall of socioeconomic inequality in childhood stunting in Indonesia. SSM Popul Health 9, 100469.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Victora, C, de Onis, M, Hallal, P et al. (2010) Worldwide timing of growth faltering: revisiting implications for interventions. Pediatrics 125, e473e480.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sinha, B, Taneja, S, Chowdhury, R et al. (2018) Low-birthweight infants born to short-stature mothers are at additional risk of stunting and poor growth velocity: evidence from secondary data analyses. Matern Child Nutr 14, e12504.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ona, DID, Jimeno, CA, Jasul, GV et al. (2021) Executive summary of the 2020 clinical practice guidelines for the management of hypertension in the Philippines. J Clin Hypertens 23, 16371650.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
WHO (2007) Indicators for Assessing Infant and Young Child Feeding Practices. https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/43895/9789241596664_eng.pdf;jsessionid=C3CB3904CB95161B93F10F9C9C71AFC5?sequence=1 (accessed June 2021).Google Scholar
Krebs-Smith, S, Smiciklas-Wright, H, Guthrie, H et al. (1987) The effects of variety in food choices on dietary quality. J Am Diet Assoc 87, 897903.Google ScholarPubMed
Hippel, P (2015) Linear v. Logistic Probability Models: Which is Better, and When? https://statisticalhorizons.com/linear-vs-logistic (accessed June 2021).Google Scholar
Mouteyica, N & Ephermia, A (2017) The Gender Welfare Gap in Nigeria: An Oaxaca Decomposition Analysis in Household Survey Data. http://hdl.handle.net/10210/271624 (accessed July 2021).Google Scholar
Sen, B (2014) Using the Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition as an empirical tool to analyze racial disparities in obesity. Obesity 22, 17501755.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fournier, M (2005) Exploiting information from path dependency in Oaxaca–Blinder decomposition procedures. Appl Econ Lett 12, 669672.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lhila, A & Long, S (2012) What is driving the black-white difference in low birthweight in the US? Health Econ 21, 301315.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sharaf, MF & Rashad, AS (2016) Regional inequalities in child malnutrition in Egypt, Jordan, and Yemen: a Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition analysis. Health Econ Rev 6, 23.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rezaei, S, Hajizadeh, M, Salimi, Y et al. (2018) What explains socioeconomic inequality in health-related quality of life in Iran? A Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition. J Prev Med Public Health 51, 219226.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Liu, K & Chunling, L (2018) Decomposing health inequality with population-based surveys: a case study in Rwanda. Int J Equity Health 17, 57.Google ScholarPubMed
Jiménez-Rubio, D & Hernández-Quevedo, C (2011) Inequalities in the use of health services between immigrants and the native population in Spain: what is driving the differences? Eur J Health Econ 12, 1728.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Das, U (2020) Decomposing of urban poor/non-poor differential in childhood malnutrition and mortality in India, 2015–16. Int J Eng Manag Res 10, 8897.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vikram, K (2018) Social capital and child nutrition in India: the moderating role of development. Health Place 50, 4251.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Joshi, A (1994) Maternal schooling and child health: preliminary analysis of the intervening mechanisms in rural Nepal. Health Transit Rev 4, 128.Google ScholarPubMed
Adedokun, ST & Yaya, S (2020) Factors influencing mothers’ health care seeking behaviour for their children: evidence from 31 countries in sub-Saharan Africa. BMC Health Serv Res 20, 842.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Weldesamuel, G, Alemayoh, T, Atalay, H et al. (2019) Modern health-seeking behavior and associated factors among mothers having under 5-years old children in Shire town, Tigray, Ethiopia: a cross-sectional study 2018. Afr J Prim Health Care Fam Med 11, 6.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Abdulraheem, I & Parakoyi, D (2009) Factors affecting mothers’ healthcare-seeking behavior for childhood illnesses in a rural Nigerian setting. Early Child Dev Care 179, 671683.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perkins, JM, Subramanian, SV, Smith, D et al. (2016) Adult height, nutrition, and population health. Nutr Rev 74, 149165.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Susser, E, Kirkbride, J, Heijmans, B et al. (2012) Maternal prenatal nutrition and health in grandchildren and subsequent generations. Annu Rev Anthropol 41, 577610.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Addo, O, Yaw, O, Yaw, A et al. (2013) Maternal height and child growth patterns. J Pediatr 163, 549554.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nahar, S, Mascie-Taylor, CG & Begum, HA (2007) Maternal anthropometry as a predictor of birth weight. Public Health Nutr 10, 965970.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Inoue, S, Naruse, H, Yorifuji, T et al. (2016) Association between short maternal height and low birth weight: a hospital-based study in Japan. J Korean Med Sci 31, 353359.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Aryastami, NK, Shankar, A, Kusumawardani, N et al. (2017) Low birth weight was the most dominant predictor associated with stunting among children aged 12–23 months in Indonesia. BMC Nutr 3, 16.Google Scholar
Tigga, P & Sen, J (2016) Maternal body mass index is strongly associated with children – scores for height and BMI. J Anthropol 2016, 110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aldana-Parra, F, Vega, GO & Fewtrell, M (2020) Associations between maternal BMI, breastfeeding practices and infant anthropometric status in Colombia; secondary analysis of ENSIN 2010. BMC Public Health 20, 232.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Phiri, T (2014) Review of Maternal Effects on Early Childhood Stunting. Grand Challenges Canada Economic Returns to Mitigating Early Life Risks Project Working Paper Series, 2014–18. https://repository.upenn.edu/gcc_economic_returns/18 (accessed July 2021).Google Scholar
Martorell, R, Flores, R & Hickey, M (2002) Stunting in Guatemala: Analyses of Change Over 15 Years. Atlanta, GA, USA: Department of International Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University.Google Scholar
Mbuya, M, Chideme, M, Chasekwa, B et al. (2010) Biological, Social, and Environmental Determinants of Low Birth Weight and Stunting among Infants and Young Children in Zimbabwe. Calverton, MD, USA: ICF Macro.Google Scholar
Hoffman, D, Sawaya, A, Verreschi, I et al. (2000) Why are nutritionally stunted children at increased risk of obesity? Studies of metabolic rate and fat oxidation in shantytown children from São Paulo, Brazil. Am J Clin Nutr 72, 702707.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Blankenship, JL, Gwavuya, S, Palaniappan, U et al. (2020) High double burden of child stunting and maternal overweight in the Republic of the Marshall Islands. Matern Child Nutr 16, Suppl. 2, e12832.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Doak, C, Ponce, M, Vossenaar, M et al. (2016) The stunted child with an overweight mother as a growing public health concern in resource-poor environments: a case study from Guatemala. Ann Hum Biol 43, 122130.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Garrett, JL & Ruel, MT (2005) Stunted child-overweight mother pairs: prevalence and association with economic development and urbanization. Food Nutr Bull 26, 209221.Google ScholarPubMed
WHO (2017) WHO Recommendations on Antenatal Care for a Positive Pregnancy Experience. https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789241549912 (accessed July 2021).Google Scholar
Guliani, H, Sepehri, A & Serieux, J (2014) Determinants of prenatal care use: evidence from 32 low-income countries across Asia, sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America. Health Policy Plan 29, 589602.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gage, A (2007) Barriers to the utilization of maternal health care in rural Mali. Soc Sci Med 65, 16661682.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gage, A & Calixte, M (2006) Effects of the physical accessibility of maternal health services on their use in rural Haiti. Popul Stud 60, 271288.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Arthur, E (2012) Wealth and antenatal care use: implications for maternal health care utilization in Ghana. Health Econ Rev 2, 14.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Say, L & Raine, R (2007) A systematic review of inequalities in the use of maternal health care in developing countries: examining the scale of the problem and the importance of context. Bull World Health Organ 85, 812819.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) & ICF (2018) Philippines National Demographic and Health Survey 2017: Key Indicators. Quezon City, Philippines, and Rockville, MD: PSA and ICF.Google Scholar
Hatløy, A, Torheim, LE & Oshaug, A (1998) Food variety – a good indicator of nutritional adequacy of the diet? A case study from an urban area in Mali, West Africa. Eur J Clin Nutr 52, 891898.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Torheim, LE, Ouattara, F, Diarra, MM et al. (2004) Nutrient adequacy and dietary diversity in Rural Mali: association and determinants. Eur J Clin Nutr 58, 594604.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moursi, MM, Arimond, M, Dewey, KG et al. (2008) Dietary diversity is a good predictor of the micronutrient density of the diet of 6-to 23-month-old children in Madagascar. J Nutr 138, 24482453.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Khamis, AG, Mwanri, AW, Ntwenya, JE et al. (2019) The influence of dietary diversity on the nutritional status of children between 6 and 23 months of age in Tanzania. BMC Pediatr 19, 518.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Issaka, A, Agho, K, Page, A et al. (2015) Determinants of suboptimal complementary feeding practices among children aged 6–23 months in four Anglophone West African countries. Matern Child Nutr 11, 1430.Google ScholarPubMed
Senarath, U, Agho, K, Akram, D et al. (2012) Comparisons of complementary feeding indicators and associated factors in children aged 6–23 months across five South Asian countries. Matern Child Nutr 8, 89106.Google ScholarPubMed
Mayen, A, Marques-Vidal, P, Paccaud, F et al. (2014) Socio-economic determinants of dietary patterns in low and middle-income countries: a systematic review. Am J Clin Nutr 100, 15201531.Google Scholar
Aemro, M, Mesele, M, Birhanu, Z et al. (2013) Dietary diversity and meal frequency practices among infant and young children aged 6–23 months in Ethiopia: a secondary analysis of Ethiopian demographic and health survey 2011. J Nutr Metab 2013, 782931.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Awasthi, S, Das, R, Verma, T et al. (2003) Anemia and undernutrition among preschool children in Uttar Pradesh, India. Indian Pediatr 40, 985990.Google ScholarPubMed
WHO (2001) Iron Deficiency Anaemia Assessment, Prevention, and Control. A Guide for Programme Managers. Washington, DC: World Health Organization.Google Scholar
Briend, A, Hoque, BA & Aziz, KM (1990) Iron in tubewell water and linear growth in rural Bangladesh. Arch Dis Child 65, 224237.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Angeles, IT, Schultink, WJ, Matulessi, P et al. (1993) Decreased rate of stunting among anemic Indonesian preschool children through iron supplementation. Am J Clin Nutr 58, 339342.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Özdemir, N (2015) Iron deficiency anemia from diagnosis to treatment in children. Turk Pediatri Ars 50, 1119.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pasricha, SR, Biggs, BA, Prashanth, N et al. (2011) Factors influencing receipt of iron supplementation by young children and their mothers in rural India: local and national cross-sectional studies. BMC Public Health 11, 617.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ray, Y (2002) Iron supplementation: country level experiences and lessons learned. J Nutr 132, 859S861S.Google Scholar
Department of Science and Technology & Food and Nutrition Research Institute (2015) 2013 Facts and Figures: Biochemical Survey. Taguig City, Philippines: Department of Science and Technology, FNRI.Google Scholar
Huda, TM, Hayes, A, El Arifeen, S et al. (2018) Social determinants of inequalities in child undernutrition in Bangladesh: a decomposition analysis. Matern Child Nutr 14, e12440.Google ScholarPubMed
Mohammed, SH, Muhammad, F, Pakzad, R et al. (2019) Socioeconomic inequality in stunting among under-5 children in Ethiopia: a decomposition analysis. BMC Res Notes 12, 184.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kumar, A & Singh, A (2013) Decomposing the gap in childhood undernutrition between poor and non-poor in urban India, 2005–06. PLoS One 8, e64972.Google Scholar
Almasian, K, Goodarzi, S, Asadi, H et al. (2010) A decomposition analysis of inequality in malnutrition among under-five children in Iran: findings from multiple indicator demographic and health survey, 2010. Iran J Public Health 48, 748757.Google Scholar
Musheiguza, E, Mahande, MJ, Malamala, E et al. (2021) Inequalities in stunting among under-five children in Tanzania: decomposing the concentration indexes using demographic health surveys from 2004–2005 to 2015–2016. Int J Equity Health 20, 46.Google Scholar
Bommer, C, Vollmer, S & Subramanian, SV (2019) How socioeconomic status moderates the stunting-age relationship in low-income and middle-income countries. BMJ Glob Health 4, e001175.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Celhay, P, Martinez, S & Vidal, C (2020) Measuring socioeconomic gaps in nutrition and early child development in Bolivia. Int J Equity Health 19, 122.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
WHO (2021) Infant and Young Child Feeding. https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/infant-and-young-child-feeding (accessed September 2021).Google Scholar
Sampa, M, Jacobs, C & Musonda, P (2018) Effect of cash transfer on school dropout rates using longitudinal data modelling: a randomized trial of research initiative to support the empowerment of girls (RISE) in Zambia. Open Public Health J 11, 507515.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mo, D, Zhang, L, Yi, H et al. (2013) School dropouts and conditional cash transfers: evidence from a randomized controlled trial in Rural China’s junior high schools. J Dev Stud 49, 190207.Google Scholar
Reyes, CM & Tabuga, A (2012) Conditional Cash Transfer Program in the Philippines: Is it Reaching the Extremely Poor? Philippine Institute for Development Studies Discussion Paper Series no. 2012–42. Makati City, Philippines: PIDS.Google Scholar
Rosenberg, M, Pettifor, A, Miller, WC et al. (2015) Relationship between school dropout and teen pregnancy among rural South African young women. Int J Epidemiol 44, 928936.Google ScholarPubMed
Stoner, M, Rucinski, K, Edwards, J et al. (2019) The relationship between school dropout and pregnancy among adolescent girls and young women in south Africa: a HPTN 068 analysis. Health Educ Behav 46, 559568.Google Scholar
Mardi, A, Ebadi, A, Shahbazi, S et al. (2018) Factors influencing the use of contraceptives through the lens of teenage women: a qualitative study in Iran. BMC Public Health 18, 202.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
WHO (2011) WHO Guidelines on Preventing Early Pregnancy and Poor Reproductive Outcomes Among Adolescents in Developing Countries. https://www.who.int/immunization/hpv/target/preventing_early_pregnancy_and_poor_reproductive_outcomes_who_2006.pdf (accessed July 2021).Google Scholar
Laksono, AD, Wulandari, RD, Ibad, M et al. (2021) The effects of mother’s education on achieving exclusive breastfeeding in Indonesia. BMC Public Health 21, 14.Google ScholarPubMed
Adnan, N & Muniandy, N (2012) The relationship between mothers‘ educational level and feeding practices among children in selected kindergartens in Selangor, Malaysia: a cross-sectional study. Asian J Clin Nutr 4, 3952.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tekelab, T, Chojent, C, Smith, R et al. (2019) Factors affecting utilization of antenatal care in Ethiopia: a systematic review and meta-analysis. PLoS One 14, e0214848.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dapaah, J & Nachinaab, J (2019) Sociocultural determinants of the utilization of maternal health care services in the Tallensi district in the upper east region of Ghana. Adv Public Health 2019, 111.Google Scholar
Self, S & Grabowski, R (2018) Factors influencing maternal health care in Nepal: the role of socioeconomic interaction. Asia Pac Sustain Dev J 25, 5375.Google Scholar
Abrigo, MRM & Paqueo, V (2017) Social Protection and Access to Health Care among Children in the Philippines. Philippine Institute for Development Studies Discussion Paper Series 2017–36. Quezon City, Philippines: PIDS.Google Scholar
Xenia, S (2014) Response to health inequity: the role of social protection in reducing poverty and achieving equity, Health Prom Int 29, Suppl. 1, i59i67.Google Scholar
Howe, LD, Hargreaves, JR & Huttly, SR (2008) Issues in the construction of wealth indices for the measurement of socio-economic position in low-income countries. Emerg Themes Epidemiol 5, 3.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Conceptual Framework. Source: adapted from Rizal MF and van Doorslaer (2018)

Figure 1

Fig. 2 Concentration curve presenting the degree of socio-economic inequality in stunting among children aged 6–23 months. Source: authors’ analysis of 2015 National Nutrition Survey

Figure 2

Table 1 Description of sample of children 6–23 months of age

Figure 3

Table 2 OLS regression coefficients using linear probability model

Figure 4

Table 3 Summary result of Oaxaca decomposition analysis showing the mean differences in stunting rates

Figure 5

Table 4 Contribution of each factor in poor and non-poor differentials in stunting (endowments or explained component)

Figure 6

Fig. 3 Contributions of each determinant to stunting inequality. Source: Authors’ analysis of 2015 National Nutrition Survey

Supplementary material: File

Ulep et al. supplementary material

Ulep et al. supplementary material

Download Ulep et al. supplementary material(File)
File 55.8 KB