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Unequal coverage of nutrition and health interventions for women and children in seven countries.

Authors :
Phuong Hong Nguyen
Singh, Nishmeet
Scott, Samuel
Neupane, Sumanta
Jangid, Manita
Walia, Monika
Murira, Zivai
Bhutta, Zulfiqar A.
Torlesse, Harriet
Piwoz, Ellen
Heidkamp, Rebecca
Menon, Purnima
Source :
Bulletin of the World Health Organization. Jan2022, Vol. 100 Issue 1, p20-29. 10p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Objective To examine inequalities and opportunity gaps in co-coverage of health and nutrition interventions in seven countries. Methods We used data from the most recent (2015-2018) demographic and health surveys of mothers with children younger than 5 years in Afghanistan (n = 19 632), Bangladesh (n = 5051), India (n = 184 641), Maldives (n = 2368), Nepal (n = 3998), Pakistan (n = 8285) and Sri Lanka (n = 7138). We estimated co-coverage for a set of eight health and eight nutrition interventions and assessed within-country inequalities in co-coverage by wealth and geography. We examined opportunity gaps by comparing coverage of nutrition interventions with coverage of their corresponding health delivery platforms. Findings Only 15% of 231 113 mother--child pairs received all eight health interventions (weighted percentage). The percentage of mother--child pairs who received no nutrition interventions was highest in Pakistan (25%). Wealth gaps (richest versus poorest) for cocoverage of health interventions were largest for Pakistan (slope index of inequality: 62 percentage points) and Afghanistan (38 percentage points). Wealth gaps for co-coverage of nutrition interventions were highest in India (32 percentage points) and Bangladesh (20 percentage points). Coverage of nutrition interventions was lower than for associated health interventions, with opportunity gaps ranging from 4 to 54 percentage points. Conclusion Co-coverage of health and nutrition interventions is far from optimal and disproportionately affects poor households in south Asia. Policy and programming efforts should pay attention to closing coverage, equity and opportunity gaps, and improving nutrition delivery through health-care and other delivery platforms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00429686
Volume :
100
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Bulletin of the World Health Organization
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
154635953
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2471/BLT.21.286650