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Chapter 6 Undernutrition: Who, Where, When

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b. With irrigation the harvest season can be extended (planting of rice normally ... Correlation coefficient tells size and direction of influence (Table 6.8-p.88) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 6 Undernutrition: Who, Where, When


1
Chapter 6 Undernutrition Who, Where, When?
2
I. Long-term perspective on undernutrition
  • Worldwide the number of malnourished people has
    declined (Table 6.2-p.76)
  • 1. All countries 35 ? 17
  • 2. 918 million ? 798 million
  • 3. Still a significant number of people

3
  • B. Regionally
  • 1. East and Southeast Asia 41?12
  • 2. South Asia
  • 33 ?22
  • 3. Sub-Saharan Africa
  • 38 ? 43 ? 33

4
C. Food production per person has gone up (Figure
6.1-p.77)
  • What does this mean for food prices?

Food prices have gone down, for the most part
(Figure 6.2-p.78)
5
D. Indexes
An index is a percentage comparison from a fixed
point of reference (base period)
  • If base period is 1961, index for
  • 1961 100

6
D. Indexes
  • If increase from 1961 to 1997 was 25, then index
    for 1997 is 125
  • If decrease from 1961 to 1997 was 50, then index
    for 1997 is 50

7
II. Seasonality of Undernutrition
  • A. Linked to the growing season
  • 1. Hungry season (May through August)
  • a. Work is scarce (wages are low)
  • b. Food is scarce (prices are high)
  • c. Families increase their consumption
    of wild fruits and vegetables

8
  • 2. Harvest season
  • a. Food is abundant (price is low)
  • b. With irrigation the harvest season can be
    extended (planting of rice normally begins
    during the monsoon.

9
III. Who is undernourished?
  • How to measure (Table 6.5-p.83)
  • 1. Calories available per person
  • Worst countries
  • Congo D.R., Burundi, Tajikistan

10
How to measure the who- Cont.
  • 2. Mortality rates for children under 5
  • Worst countries Sierra Leone, Angola,
    Afghanistan
  • 3. Percentage of underweight children
  • Worst countries Korea, Afghanistan,
    Bangladesh

11
  • B. Looking at all 3 measures
  • 1. Most of the worst countries are in
    sub-Saharan Africa

12
C. Rural areas worse off than urban
  • Rural incomes lower than urban
  • Many policies favor urban areas

13
  • D. Children most vulnerable during weaning
  • E. Pregnant and nursing women next worse off
  • F. Old women also vulnerable to undernutrition

14
IV. Variables that influence percentage of
weight-for-age
  • Correlation coefficient tells size and direction
    of influence
  • (Table 6.8-p.88)

15
  • Number of years of education of mother and father
    has a positive correlation coefficient
  • a. More education increases percentage of
    weight-for-age

16
  • 2. Positive coefficient on income
  • a. Higher income implies higher percentage
    weight for age
  • b. Less important in farming families than in
    nonfarming families

17
  • 3. Age of weaning has positive coefficient
  • a. The later a child is weaned the higher the
    percentage weight-for- age

18
  • 4. Negative coefficient on total number of
    household members
  • a. More people in the family implies lower
    percentage weight-for-age

19
  • 5. Birth order has a negative coefficient
  • a. Children born after other children are more
    likely to have a lower percentage of
    weight-for-age

20
  • 6. Negative coefficient on type of infant feeding
  • a. implies that babies that are only bottle fed
    have a lower percentage weight-for-age compared
    to children who are breast fed
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