Coverage and determinants of deworming uptake among under-five children in Somalia: A multilevel analysis of the 2020 SDHS data
Abdirahman Omer Ali, Awo Mohamed Kahie, Muhyadin Yusuf Dahir, Suhaib Mohamed Kahie, Abdisalam Mahdi Hassan, Md. Moyazzem Hossain, Clement Yaro, Clement Yaro, Clement Yaro, Clement Yaro

TL;DR
This study finds that deworming coverage is very low among young children in Somalia, with factors like maternal education and urban residence linked to better uptake.
Contribution
The study identifies multilevel factors influencing deworming uptake in Somalia using a multilevel logistic regression model.
Findings
Only 8.0% of children aged 12–59 months received deworming medication, showing critically low coverage.
Urban and nomadic residence, higher maternal education, and wealth were associated with better deworming uptake.
Children without recent diarrhea had higher odds of not receiving deworming treatment.
Abstract
Soil-transmitted helminth (STH) infections are a major public health concern in Somalia, particularly affecting the health and development of children under five. Therefore, this study aimed to assess the coverage of deworming uptake and identify associated multilevel factors with deworming uptake among Somali children aged 12–59 months using a Multilevel logistic regression model. This study analyzed data of 15,074 children aged 12–59 months from the 2020 Somalia Demographic and Health Survey (SDHS). Chi-square test and multilevel logistic regression were used to examine individual (maternal/child characteristics, health service use) and community (residence, region) factors associated with non-receipt of deworming medication (poor uptake). Only 8.0% of children had received deworming medication, indicating critically low national coverage. The variations of poor deworming uptake…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParasites and Host Interactions · Child Nutrition and Water Access · Global Maternal and Child Health
