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The final chapter brings the findings to the current context of Spanish American countries. Two centuries after independence, rural conflict is a rarer occurrence than in the 1800s; yet, the spatial segregation of indigenous minorities and the limits to political representation remain. Relying on contemporary data from Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico, and Peru, the chapter shows that subnational territories with more intense office-selling in the past exhibit greater childhood malnutrition and stunting as well as low weight at birth. This is unlikely to be driven by alternative factors – such as the mere presence of indigenous populations or postcolonial developments – as the differences are visible with fine-level data only comparing localities straddling the borders of former colonial jurisdictions. Sides of the border with greater venality have today lower public good and economic well-being vis-a-vis neighboring ones, consistent with effects running through local governance. The chapter closes with a discussion of the implications of these findings for the study of corruption; the Spanish Empire; as well as for understanding other contexts where office-selling also took place (China, France, and Iran).
To analyse the spatial variation and risk factors of the dual burden of childhood stunting and wasting in Myanmar.
Design:
Analysis was carried out on nationally representative data obtained from the Myanmar Demographic and Health Survey conducted during 2015–2016. Childhood stunting and wasting are used as proxies of chronic and acute childhood undernutrition. A child with standardised height-for-age Z score (HAZ) below –2 is categorised as stunted while that with a weight-for-height Z score (WHZ) below –2 as wasted.
Setting:
A nationally representative sample of households from the fifteen states and regions of Myanmar.
Participants:
Children under the age of five ($n$ 4162).
Results:
Overall marginal prevalence of childhood stunting and wasting was 28·9 % (95 % CI 27·5, 30·2) and 7·3 % (95 % CI 6·5, 8·0) while their concurrent prevalence was 1·6 % (95 % CI 1·2, 2·0). The study revealed mild positive association between stunting and wasting across Myanmar. Both stunting and wasting had significant spatial variation across the country with eastern regions having higher burden of stunting while southern regions having higher prevalence of wasting. Child age and maternal WHZ score had significant non-linear association with both stunting and wasting while child gender, ethnicity and household wealth quintile had significant association with stunting.
Conclusion:
The study provides data-driven evidence about the association between stunting and wasting and their spatial variation across Myanmar. The resulting insights can aid in the formulation and implementation of targeted, region-specific interventions towards improving the state of childhood undernutrition in Myanmar.
Childhood stunting remains a major public health concern in Bangladesh. To accelerate the reduction rate of stunting, special focus is required during the first 23 months of a child’s life when the bulk of growth takes place. Therefore the present study explored individual-, maternal- and household-level factors associated with stunting among children under 2 years of age in Bangladesh.
Design
Data were collected through a nationwide cross-sectional survey conducted between October 2015 and January 2016. A two-stage cluster random sampling procedure was applied to select 11 428 households. In the first stage, 210 enumerations areas (EA) were selected with probability proportional to EA size (180 EA from rural areas, thirty EA from urban slums). In the second stage, an average of fifty-four households were selected from each EA through systematic random sampling.
Setting
Rural areas and urban slums of Bangladesh.
Participants
A total of 6539 children aged 0–23 months.
Results
Overall, 29·9 % of the children were stunted. After adjusting for all potential confounders in the modified Poisson regression model, child’s gender, birth weight (individual level), maternal education, age at first pregnancy, nutrition (maternal level), administrative division, place of residence, socio-economic status, food security status, access to sanitary latrine and toilet hygiene condition (household level) were significantly associated with stunting.
Conclusions
The study identified a number of potentially addressable multilevel risk factors for stunting among young children in Bangladesh that should be addressed through comprehensive multicomponent interventions.
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