Abstract

SummaryBackgroundAdolescent pregnancy and child undernutrition are major social and public health concerns. We aimed to examine associations between adolescent pregnancy and child undernutrition in India, where one in five adolescents live, and one in three of the world's stunted children.MethodsData were from India's fourth National Family Health Survey, 2015–16. Primiparous women aged 15–49 years who gave birth between 2010 and 2016 were classified on the basis of age at first birth: 10–19 years (adolescence), 20–24 years (young adulthood), and 25 years or older (adulthood). Primary outcomes were anthropometric measures of offspring undernutrition. Multivariable regression and structural equation models were used to understand the extent to which these measures were linked to adolescent pregnancy and the potential social, biological, and programmatic pathways.FindingsOf the 60 096 women in the sample, 14 107 (25%) first gave birth during adolescence. Children born to adolescent mothers had lower Z scores for length or height-for-age (mean difference −0·53 SD), weight-for-age (–0·40 SD), and weight-for-length or height (–0·16 SD) than children born to adult mothers. Compared with adult mothers, adolescent mothers were shorter (–1·21 cm, 95% CI −1·78 to −0·65), more likely to be underweight (18 percentage points, 15–21) and anaemic (8 percentage points, 6–11), less likely to access health services (–4 to −15 percentage points), and had poorer complementary feeding practices (–3 to −9 percentage points). Adolescent mothers also had less education (–3·30 years, 95% CI −3·68 to −2·91), less bargaining power (–7 to −15 percentage points), and lived in poorer households (–0·66 SD, 96% CI −0·82 to −0·50) with poorer sanitation (–28 percentage points, −32 to −24). In the path analysis, these intermediate factors predicted child anthropometry, with the strongest links being mother's education (18%), socioeconomic status (13%), and weight (15%).InterpretationChildren born to adolescent mothers are at risk of being undernourished. Adolescent pregnancy is related to child undernutrition through poor maternal nutritional status, lower education, less health service access, poor complementary feeding practices, and poor living conditions. Policies and programmes to delay pregnancy and promote women's rights could help break the intergenerational cycle of undernutrition through many routes.FundingBill & Melinda Gates Foundation through Partnerships and Opportunities to Strengthen and Harmonize Actions for Nutrition in India, led by the International Food Policy Research Institute.

Highlights

  • Adolescence, a period of crucial physical and neuromaturational changes, is increasingly recognised as a life stage worthy of strategic health investments.[1]

  • By use of nationally representative data on more than 60 000 mother-child pairs in India and examination of multiple pathways, we found that adolescent pregnancy is associated with child undernutrition through factors such as poorer maternal nutritional status, lower educational attainment, less access to health services during antenatal or postnatal care and early childhood, suboptimal complementary feeding practices, and poorer living conditions compared with adult pregnancy

  • We identified 27 studies published between 1990 and 2018; from these studies we identified five broad groups of factors linking adolescent pregnancy to child undernutrition: maternal nutritional status, education and bargaining power, access to health services, child feeding practices, and living conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Adolescence, a period of crucial physical and neuromaturational changes, is increasingly recognised as a life stage worthy of strategic health investments.[1] The UN’s Sustainable Development Agenda includes specific targets on reducing poverty and hunger, ensuring healthy lives and wellbeing at all ages, empowering women, and achieving equity in education; these targets will not be reached without building the capabilities of adolescents.[2]. Owing to societal pressure to consummate the marriage and low sexual reproductive health knowledge, among other factors, 31% of married Indian women gave birth by the age of 18 years in 2016.4 www.thelancet.com/child-adolescent Vol 3 July 2019

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