What Explains the Large Disparity in Child Stunting in the Philippines? A Decomposition Analysis

Objective:About a 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 (NNS), w...

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Main Authors: Ulep, Valerie Gilbert T, Uy, Jhanna, Casas, Lyle Daryll
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2021
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/hs-faculty-pubs/12
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/public-health-nutrition/article/abs/what-explains-the-large-disparity-in-child-stunting-in-the-philippines-a-decomposition-analysis/31833E6246F03A743199AB1E5276574C
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.hs-faculty-pubs-10132022-02-03T06:53:04Z What Explains the Large Disparity in Child Stunting in the Philippines? A Decomposition Analysis Ulep, Valerie Gilbert T Uy, Jhanna Casas, Lyle Daryll Objective:About a 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 (NNS), we conducted a linear probability model to examine the determinants of child stunting then an Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition to explain the factors contributing to the gap in stunting between poor and non-poor children. Setting:Philippines Participants:1, 881 children aged 6-23 months Results:The overall stunting prevalence was 38.5% with significant gap between poor and non-poor (45.0% vs. 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. 2021-10-04T07:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/hs-faculty-pubs/12 https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/public-health-nutrition/article/abs/what-explains-the-large-disparity-in-child-stunting-in-the-philippines-a-decomposition-analysis/31833E6246F03A743199AB1E5276574C Health Sciences Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo malnutrition stunting inequality Philippines Oaxaca-Blinder Dietetics and Clinical Nutrition Inequality and Stratification Social Welfare
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic malnutrition
stunting
inequality
Philippines
Oaxaca-Blinder
Dietetics and Clinical Nutrition
Inequality and Stratification
Social Welfare
spellingShingle malnutrition
stunting
inequality
Philippines
Oaxaca-Blinder
Dietetics and Clinical Nutrition
Inequality and Stratification
Social Welfare
Ulep, Valerie Gilbert T
Uy, Jhanna
Casas, Lyle Daryll
What Explains the Large Disparity in Child Stunting in the Philippines? A Decomposition Analysis
description Objective:About a 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 (NNS), we conducted a linear probability model to examine the determinants of child stunting then an Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition to explain the factors contributing to the gap in stunting between poor and non-poor children. Setting:Philippines Participants:1, 881 children aged 6-23 months Results:The overall stunting prevalence was 38.5% with significant gap between poor and non-poor (45.0% vs. 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.
format text
author Ulep, Valerie Gilbert T
Uy, Jhanna
Casas, Lyle Daryll
author_facet Ulep, Valerie Gilbert T
Uy, Jhanna
Casas, Lyle Daryll
author_sort Ulep, Valerie Gilbert T
title What Explains the Large Disparity in Child Stunting in the Philippines? A Decomposition Analysis
title_short What Explains the Large Disparity in Child Stunting in the Philippines? A Decomposition Analysis
title_full What Explains the Large Disparity in Child Stunting in the Philippines? A Decomposition Analysis
title_fullStr What Explains the Large Disparity in Child Stunting in the Philippines? A Decomposition Analysis
title_full_unstemmed What Explains the Large Disparity in Child Stunting in the Philippines? A Decomposition Analysis
title_sort what explains the large disparity in child stunting in the philippines? a decomposition analysis
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2021
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/hs-faculty-pubs/12
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/public-health-nutrition/article/abs/what-explains-the-large-disparity-in-child-stunting-in-the-philippines-a-decomposition-analysis/31833E6246F03A743199AB1E5276574C
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