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Socio-Ecological Factors That Influence Infant and Young Child Nutrition in Kiribati: A Biocultural Perspective

This study sought to elucidate the multi-level factors that influence behaviors underlying high childhood stunting and widespread micronutrient deficiencies in Kiribati. This two-phase formative research study had an emergent and iterative design using the socio-ecological model as the guiding theor...

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Autores principales: Kodish, Stephen R., Grey, Kelsey, Matean, Maryam, Palaniappan, Uma, Gwavuya, Stanley, Gomez, Caitlin, Iuta, Tinai, Timeon, Eretii, Northrup-Lyons, Martina, McLean, Judy, Erasmus, Wendy
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6627610/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31200550
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu11061330
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author Kodish, Stephen R.
Grey, Kelsey
Matean, Maryam
Palaniappan, Uma
Gwavuya, Stanley
Gomez, Caitlin
Iuta, Tinai
Timeon, Eretii
Northrup-Lyons, Martina
McLean, Judy
Erasmus, Wendy
author_facet Kodish, Stephen R.
Grey, Kelsey
Matean, Maryam
Palaniappan, Uma
Gwavuya, Stanley
Gomez, Caitlin
Iuta, Tinai
Timeon, Eretii
Northrup-Lyons, Martina
McLean, Judy
Erasmus, Wendy
author_sort Kodish, Stephen R.
collection PubMed
description This study sought to elucidate the multi-level factors that influence behaviors underlying high childhood stunting and widespread micronutrient deficiencies in Kiribati. This two-phase formative research study had an emergent and iterative design using the socio-ecological model as the guiding theoretical framework. Phase 1 was exploratory while phase 2 was confirmatory. In phase 1, in-depth interviews, free lists, seasonal food availability calendar workshops, and household observations were conducted. In phase 2, focus group discussions, pile sorts, participatory workshops, and repeat observations of the same households were completed. Textual data were analyzed using NVivo software; ethnographic data were analyzed with Anthropac software for cultural domain analysis. We found a combination of interrelated structural, community, interpersonal, and individual-level factors contributing to the early child nutrition situation in Kiribati. Despite widespread knowledge of nutritious young child foods among community members, households make dietary decisions based not only on food availability and access, but also longstanding traditions and social norms. Diarrheal disease is the most salient young child illness, attributable to unsanitary environments and sub-optimal water, sanitation, and hygiene behaviors. This research underscores the importance of a multi-pronged approach to most effectively address the interrelated policy, community, interpersonal, and individual-level determinants of infant and young child nutrition in Kiribati.
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spelling pubmed-66276102019-07-23 Socio-Ecological Factors That Influence Infant and Young Child Nutrition in Kiribati: A Biocultural Perspective Kodish, Stephen R. Grey, Kelsey Matean, Maryam Palaniappan, Uma Gwavuya, Stanley Gomez, Caitlin Iuta, Tinai Timeon, Eretii Northrup-Lyons, Martina McLean, Judy Erasmus, Wendy Nutrients Article This study sought to elucidate the multi-level factors that influence behaviors underlying high childhood stunting and widespread micronutrient deficiencies in Kiribati. This two-phase formative research study had an emergent and iterative design using the socio-ecological model as the guiding theoretical framework. Phase 1 was exploratory while phase 2 was confirmatory. In phase 1, in-depth interviews, free lists, seasonal food availability calendar workshops, and household observations were conducted. In phase 2, focus group discussions, pile sorts, participatory workshops, and repeat observations of the same households were completed. Textual data were analyzed using NVivo software; ethnographic data were analyzed with Anthropac software for cultural domain analysis. We found a combination of interrelated structural, community, interpersonal, and individual-level factors contributing to the early child nutrition situation in Kiribati. Despite widespread knowledge of nutritious young child foods among community members, households make dietary decisions based not only on food availability and access, but also longstanding traditions and social norms. Diarrheal disease is the most salient young child illness, attributable to unsanitary environments and sub-optimal water, sanitation, and hygiene behaviors. This research underscores the importance of a multi-pronged approach to most effectively address the interrelated policy, community, interpersonal, and individual-level determinants of infant and young child nutrition in Kiribati. MDPI 2019-06-13 /pmc/articles/PMC6627610/ /pubmed/31200550 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu11061330 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Kodish, Stephen R.
Grey, Kelsey
Matean, Maryam
Palaniappan, Uma
Gwavuya, Stanley
Gomez, Caitlin
Iuta, Tinai
Timeon, Eretii
Northrup-Lyons, Martina
McLean, Judy
Erasmus, Wendy
Socio-Ecological Factors That Influence Infant and Young Child Nutrition in Kiribati: A Biocultural Perspective
title Socio-Ecological Factors That Influence Infant and Young Child Nutrition in Kiribati: A Biocultural Perspective
title_full Socio-Ecological Factors That Influence Infant and Young Child Nutrition in Kiribati: A Biocultural Perspective
title_fullStr Socio-Ecological Factors That Influence Infant and Young Child Nutrition in Kiribati: A Biocultural Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Socio-Ecological Factors That Influence Infant and Young Child Nutrition in Kiribati: A Biocultural Perspective
title_short Socio-Ecological Factors That Influence Infant and Young Child Nutrition in Kiribati: A Biocultural Perspective
title_sort socio-ecological factors that influence infant and young child nutrition in kiribati: a biocultural perspective
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6627610/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31200550
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu11061330
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