Abstract

BackgroundEarly marriage and early childbearing are common practices in Ethiopia. Girls who get married and give birth at a very young age are more likely to experience several health problems including anemia among others. However, the effects of early marriage and early childbearing on anemia status of adolescent girls have not been quantified in previous studies. In this study, we assessed whether early marriage and early childbearing measured at both individual and community levels are associated with adolescent anemia.MethodsWe analyzed data from the 2016 demographic and health survey of Ethiopia. Our study focused on 3172 late female adolescents (15–19 years). We used the chi-squared test and spearman correlation coefficients for bivariate analysis. The relationship between early marriage and childbearing with anemia was evaluated using multilevel binary logistic regression models while controlling other determinants.ResultsOverall prevalence of anemia among female adolescents was 23.8% (95% CI; 22.3–25.2). Our multivariable multilevel analysis showed that individual-level marital status (AOR = 1.53, 95% CI = 1.06–2.02) and community-level childbearing status (AOR = 2.80, 95% CI 1.25–6.29) were positively associated with anemia among female adolescents.ConclusionOur findings show the presence of significant association between early marriage & early childbearing with adolescent anemia. Therefore, there is a need for effective policies and programs to end the practice of early child marriage and the consequent adolescent pregnancy in Ethiopia. This will help to improve nutritional status of adolescent girls as well as nutritional outcomes of their children.

Highlights

  • Marriage and early childbearing are common practices in Ethiopia

  • Our chi-square test showed that almost all variables had significant associations with anemia both at 0.01 and 0.05 significant levels

  • The results showed that married adolescents were 1.53 times (AOR = 1.53; 95% confidence intervals (CI): 1.06–2.20) more likely to be anemic compared to non-married ones

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Summary

Introduction

Marriage and early childbearing are common practices in Ethiopia. The effects of early marriage and early childbearing on anemia status of adolescent girls have not been quantified in previous studies. We assessed whether early marriage and early childbearing measured at both individual and community levels are associated with adolescent anemia. WHO defines ‘Adolescents’ as individuals in the 10–19 years age group [1]. Adolescents are nutritionally vulnerable groups due to the rapid growth and development which occurs at this age. Being at their growth spurt, their dietary needs are high and this makes them to be susceptible to anemia and other micronutrient deficiencies [4].

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