Abstract

Household expenditure surveys, routinely conducted in low—and middle-income countries (LMICs), usually include questions pertaining to recent household expenditures on key food groups. When child anthropometrics are also available, such expenditure data can provide insights into household food purchasing patterns that are associated with subsequent child growth measures. We used data from 6993 children, born around 2001, from Ethiopia, India, Peru, and Vietnam, from the Young Lives younger cohort. We compared associations between two weeks of household food expenditures (in PPP—Purchasing Power Parity adjusted dollars) on food groups and child height-for-age-Z score (HAZ) at subsequent time points to assess longitudinal associations. Total food expenditures, rural/urban residence, maternal and paternal schooling, and child sex were included in our adjusted models because they may affect the relations between household food group expenditures and future child HAZ. In Ethiopia, India, and Peru every extra PPP$ spent on fats was associated with 0.02–0.07 higher future HAZ. In Vietnam every extra PPP$ spent on starches, was significantly associated with a 0.01 lower future HAZ. Across countries, different patterns of food expenditure and procurement may be differentially critical for predicting child HAZ. Our results demonstrate how expenditures on specific food groups can be associated with children’s linear growth. This study provides additional evidence of the utility of longitudinal household food expenditure data in understanding child nutritional status.

Highlights

  • According to UNICEF estimates from 2019, approximately 144 million children under the age of 5 years were stunted [1]

  • We capitalize on three survey rounds of Young Lives’ younger-cohort longitudinal data to understand how household food group expenditures at earlier ages predict children’s height-for-age-Z score (HAZ) subsequently, adjusting for other factors such as child sex, and household, parental, and community characteristics that might influence the relations between household food group expenditures and subsequent child HAZ

  • We used data on 6.993 children born around 2001 from Ethiopia, India, Peru, and Vietnam collected at ages 5, 8, and 12 years from the Young Lives younger cohort to assess the longitudinal associations between expenditures on key food groups at 5 years and 8 years and child

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Summary

Introduction

According to UNICEF estimates from 2019, approximately 144 million children under the age of 5 years were stunted [1]. Poor childhood nutritional status has been associated with cognitive deficits, impaired growth, lower lifetime educational achievements and earnings, and lower birth weights in the generation [2]. While child undernutrition is a complex and multifactorial problem, inadequate food intake is considered one of two immediate major causes of child undernutrition [3,4]. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 4739; doi:10.3390/ijerph17134739 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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