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Maternal height and child health and schooling in sub-Saharan Africa: Decomposition and heterogeneity.

Authors :
Karlsson, Omar
Dribe, Martin
Source :
Social Science & Medicine. Dec2022, Vol. 315, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Maternal height is associated with mortality and anthropometry in low-and-middle-income countries. This paper explored residual associations and potential underlying mechanisms linking maternal height to several child outcomes using regression models with neighborhood and half-sibling fixed effects and Gelbach decomposition on 108 Demographic and Health Surveys from 37 sub-Saharan African countries. When adjusting for time of birth, twinning, sex, and survey, a single z-score (6.5 cm) increase in mother's height was associated with a 22% reduction in the average deficit in height-for-age among children under five (according to the WHO 2006 growth standard), 16% lower neonatal mortality (age <1 month) , 10% lower postneonatal mortality (age 1–11 months), 11% lower child mortality (age 12–59 months) , and 2% increase in school attendance among 7–16-year-olds. Adjusting further for maternal education, household living standards, maternal fertility and birth related factors, and neighborhood reduced the coefficients for maternal height by 22% for child height-for-age, 26% for neonatal mortality, 46% for postneonatal mortality, 56% for child mortality, and 90% for school attendance. The decomposition showed that adjusting for neighborhood had a substantial impact on the association of maternal height with all outcomes, especially child mortality. Adjusting for unobserved father and household factors also had a particularly large impact on the association with child mortality. The robustness of the relationship with neonatal mortality suggests that pregnancy and perinatal factors are an important link between maternal height and child outcomes. Adult living standards and socioeconomic and related behavioral factors likely play a small role. Genetics may also play a large role in linking maternal height and child height-for-age, especially for educated mothers, whose height was presumably impacted less by early life adversity. • Neonatal deaths and height-for-age had a strong and direct link to mother's height. • Links with postneonatal and child mortality and school attendance were weaker. • Pregnancy and perinatal factors appeared to link mother's height and child outcomes. • Genetics were likely to mostly link mother's and child's height. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02779536
Volume :
315
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Social Science & Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
160587622
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.115480