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Factors mediating the association between recurring floods and child chronic undernutrition in northern Bangladesh

•Children who had experienced flooding had a higher chance of having chronic undernutrition than children who had not experienced flooding.•A significant direct effect was observed in the model of exposure to flood and the likelihood of child chronic undernutrition.•Inadequate minimum dietary divers...

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Published in:Nutrition (Burbank, Los Angeles County, Calif.) Los Angeles County, Calif.), 2024-03, Vol.119, p.112300-112300, Article 112300
Main Authors: Rahman, Mosiur, Sarkar, Prosannajid, Islam, Md. Jahirul, Adam, Izzeldin Fadl, Duc, Nguyen Huu Chau, Al-Sobaihi, Saber
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•Children who had experienced flooding had a higher chance of having chronic undernutrition than children who had not experienced flooding.•A significant direct effect was observed in the model of exposure to flood and the likelihood of child chronic undernutrition.•Inadequate minimum dietary diversity, history of diarrhea, not being fully vaccinated, not using clean cooking fuel, and not having a separate kitchen significantly mediate the relationship between exposure to flood and the likelihood of child chronic undernutrition. Although there is some evidence that flood exposure in Bangladesh and other developing countries increases the risk of chronic undernutrition in children, the underlying mechanisms are, to our knowledge, unknown. The objectives of this research are to examine the association between recurrent flood exposure and the likelihood of chronic undernutrition in children and to investigate the mediators of this association. This cross-sectional study was conducted in the Naogaon District in northern Bangladesh. Purposive sampling was used to choose 800 children between the ages of 12 and 59 mo in equal numbers in the specified flood-affected and flood-unaffected areas: 400 children from the flood-affected area and 400 from the flood-unaffected area. The nutrition indicator height for age, expressed as z scores, was used to define child chronic undernutrition. Our study focused on children who have been exposed to multiple floods in the past 5 y. In our sample data, children who had experienced flooding had a 1.74-times higher chance of having chronic undernutrition (95% CI, 1.53–2.28) than children who had not experienced flooding. The mediation analyses found inadequate minimum dietary diversity, history of diarrhea, not being fully vaccinated, not using clean cooking fuel, and not having a separate kitchen contributed 19.5%, 10%, 9.8%, 14.8%, and 10%, respectively, to the flood exposure–child undernutrition association. Flood exposure was found associated with the likelihood of child chronic undernutrition, and this relationship was mediated through lack of having a separate kitchen, history of diarrhea, insufficient vaccination, use of unclean cooking fuel, and poor minimum dietary diversity. Interventions to reduce the prevalence of these risk factors could contribute to reducing the disparities in child undernourishment brought on by exposure to flooding.
ISSN:0899-9007
1873-1244
DOI:10.1016/j.nut.2023.112300