Brazil’s Bolsa Família conditional cash transfer and child malnutrition: a nationwide birth cohort study
Ila R Falcão, João Guilherme G Tedde, Enny Paixao, Thiago Cerqueira-Silva, Aline dos Santos Rocha, Rosemeire L Fiaccone, Natanael J Silva, Juliana Freitas de Mello e Silva, Maria Y Ichihara, Julia M Pescarini, Rita de Cássia Ribeiro-Silva, Mauricio Lima Barreto

TL;DR
A study in Brazil found that a cash transfer program helped reduce child stunting but increased the risk of overweight in some groups.
Contribution
This study provides new evidence on the nationwide impact of Brazil’s Bolsa Família program on child malnutrition outcomes.
Findings
BFP participation was associated with a 17% lower chance of stunting in children.
BFP was linked to a 19% higher chance of wasting in children.
Protective effects were stronger in rural areas and among children of less-educated mothers.
Abstract
Poverty amplifies the risk of malnutrition, which is particularly harmful to children as it can perpetuate a cycle of poverty and poor health. This study aims to assess the association of a conditional cash transfer programme (Bolsa Família Program (BFP)) with child nutrition nationwide in Brazil. We used the Centre for Data and Knowledge Integration for Health Birth Cohort (baseline data from the National Registry for Social Programmes (CadÚnico) linked with live births and nutrition registries) to conduct a longitudinal population-based study between 2008 and 2015. This cohort study followed children from birth until 5 years old between 1 January 2008 and 31 December 2015. Children exposed were those who received the BFP benefit at any time during follow-up and were compared with those who never received it. Malnutrition outcomes were assessed using height-for-age, weight-for-height…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild Nutrition and Water Access · Poverty, Education, and Child Welfare · Birth, Development, and Health
