Abstract

There is a knowledge gap on abnormal birth weight in urban Nigeria where specific community contexts can have a significant impact on a child's health. Abnormal birth weight, classified into low birth weight and high birth weight, is often associated with adverse health outcomes and a leading risk for neonatal morbidity and mortality. The study used datasets from the birth recode file of 2013 and 2018 Nigeria Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS); a weighted sample of pooled 9,244 live births by 7,951 mothers within ten years (2008-2018) in urban Nigeria. The effects of individual, healthcare utilization and community-level variables on the two abnormal birth weight categories were explored with a multinomial logistic regression models using normal birth weight as a reference group. In urban Nigeria, the overall prevalence of ABW was 18.3%; high birth weight accounted for the majority (10.7%) of infants who were outside the normal birth weight range. Predictors of LBW were community (region), child characteristic (the type of birth) and household (wealth index) while that of HBW were community (regions), child characteristics (birth intervals and sex), maternal characteristic (education) and healthcare utilization (ANC registration). LBW was significantly more prevalent in the northern part while HBW was more common in the southern part of urban Nigeria. This pattern conforms to the expected north-south dichotomy in health indicators and outcomes. These differences can be linked to suggested variation in regional exposure to urbanization in Nigeria.

Highlights

  • Urbanization has been linked to improved child health outcomes because of the assumed advantage in access to improved health care services, higher education and its associated benefits and good infrastructure [1]

  • This pattern of a higher proportion of high birth weight (HBW) among abnormal birth weights is in contrast to findings in similar African countries- Ghana and Ethiopia [28,29,30] where low birth weight (LBW) was higher than HBW

  • Nigeria is a pronatalist society and it is important to note that abnormal birth weight is high in urban Nigeria

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Summary

Introduction

Urbanization has been linked to improved child health outcomes because of the assumed advantage in access to improved health care services, higher education and its associated benefits and good infrastructure [1]. Rapid urbanization in megacities in Africa, as well as adaptation to the new urban culture and lifestyles [2,3,4,5,6] can affect the maternal quality of life during pregnancy and constitute significant predictors of health outcomes [1, 7, 8] Exploring health outcomes such as birth weight in the urban setting is pertinent in the context of high rates of urban natural increase and changing lifestyle, which is due to the youthful age structure of urban population in Sub-Saharan Africa [9, 10]. Other researchers may apply for access from ICF Macro Institutional Data Access via the following instructions: https://www.dhsprogram.com/data/ Access-Instructions.cfm

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