Abstract

BackgroundAlthough decreasing in trend, one-in-three children remain stunted in Nepal and its distribution is unequal among different socioeconomic and geographical subgroups. Thus, it is crucial to assess inequalities in stunting for designing equity focused interventions that target vulnerable groups with higher burden of stunting. This study measures trends and predictors of socioeconomic inequalities in childhood stunting in Nepal.MethodsData from five rounds (1996–2016) of Nepal Demographic and Health Survey, nationally representative cross-sectional surveys, were used. Levels and trends of absolute and relative disparity in stunting between the poorest and the richest wealth quintiles, and among all quintiles were assessed by calculating absolute and relative difference, concentration curve and index. Average marginal effects of predictors on stunting were calculated using probit regression. The concentration index was subsequently decomposed into contributing factors.ResultsEven though stunting consistently declined in all wealth quintiles between 1996 and 2016, reduction was relatively higher among the richer quintiles compared to poorer ones. The absolute difference between the poorest and the richest quintile increased from 24.7 in 1996 (64.5% in poorest – 39.8% in richest) to 32.7 percentage points in 2016 (49.2–16.5%). The relative disparity also increased; the ratio of stunting in the poorest to the richest quintile was 1.6 in 1996 and 3.0 in 2016. The concentration index increased (in absolute value) from − 0.078 in 1996 to − 0.147 in 2016 indicating that stunting was disproportionately concentrated in poorer households and socioeconomic inequalities worsened from 1996 to 2016. Decomposition analysis revealed that in 1996, wealth (61%), caste/ethnicity (12%), mother’s education (12%) and birth order (9%) were the major contributors to observed socioeconomic inequalities in stunting; while in 2016, wealth (72%), mother’s BMI (12%) and birth order (9%) were the major contributors.ConclusionsDespite remarkable improvements in average stunting over the last two decades, substantial socioeconomic inequalities in stunting exists and is determined not only by immediate factors but also by underlying and contextual factors which emphasize the need for coherent actions across different sectors. In addition to reducing inequalities in wealth, nutrition programming should be focused on most disadvantaged subgroups which are prone to both stunting and relative poverty.

Highlights

  • Under-nutrition is still a major barrier for child growth and development in developing countries

  • This study aims to assess the levels and trends in childhood stunting by wealth quintile in Nepal; use absolute and relative measures including concentration index to capture inequality across all quintiles; and ‘decompose’ these inequalities by quantifying the contributions attributable to each predictors and examine their changes over time

  • Socioeconomic inequalities Stunting has consistently declined in all wealth quintiles between 1996 and 2016

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Summary

Introduction

Under-nutrition is still a major barrier for child growth and development in developing countries. Low height-for-age or stunting is an important indicator for assessing undernutrition among children. It represents the devastated result of poor nutrition over a long period, in children under-five years [1]. Stunting can happen in the first 1000 days of child’s life after conception and is worsened by recurrent and chronic illnesses [2, 3]. Even survivors are more likely to lead diminished lives, have compromised cognitive abilities, reduced school performance, lowered economic productivity and are at a greater risk of nutrition-related chronic diseases later in life [2, 4]. One-in-three children remain stunted in Nepal and its distribution is unequal among different socioeconomic and geographical subgroups. This study measures trends and predictors of socioeconomic inequalities in childhood stunting in Nepal

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