Coexisting maternal and child undernutrition in Ethiopia: Spatial modeling and multilevel analysis of consecutive EDHS data
Mekuriaw Nibret Aweke, Habtamu Abebe Getahun, Samuel Teferi Chanie, Gelila Yitageasu, Gebrie Getu Alemu, Asebe Hagos, Mengistie Kassahun Tariku, Gezahegn Eshetu Mekuriya, Habtamu Wagnew Abuhay, Lidetu Demoze, Gedefaw Abeje, Daniel Bekalo, Miquel Vall-llosera Camps

TL;DR
This study maps and analyzes the factors behind coexisting maternal and child undernutrition in Ethiopia, finding higher rates in northern regions and identifying education and wealth as key factors.
Contribution
The study provides a spatial and multilevel analysis of coexisting maternal and child undernutrition in Ethiopia using consecutive EDHS data.
Findings
Coexisting maternal and child undernutrition prevalence was 22.87% in Ethiopia.
Hotspot areas were concentrated in northern regions like Tigray and Amhara.
Higher maternal education and household wealth were associated with lower undernutrition rates.
Abstract
Maternal and child undernutrition remains a major public health challenge globally, with the highest burdens observed in low- and middle-income countries. Coexisting maternal and child undernutrition has serious implications for survival, growth, and quality of life.Maternal and child undernutrition is a complex, multifactorial issue influenced by a web of interconnected determinants including health, socio-economic status, education and environmental conditions. To examine the spatial distribution and multilevel determinants of coexisting maternal and child undernutrition in Ethiopia using EDHS data from 2000–2016. We analyzed a weighted sample of 33,445 participants from four consecutive EDHS surveys. Spatial autocorrelation, hotspot, and interpolation analyses were conducted using ArcMap 10.8. Multilevel logistic regression was performed in Stata 17. Cluster variability was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild Nutrition and Water Access · Global Maternal and Child Health · Iron Metabolism and Disorders
