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Determinants of Child Size at Birth and Associated Maternal Factor in Gurage Zone

BACKGROUND: Birth weight plays an important role in infant mortality and morbidity, child development, and future health of the child. Reports showed that low birth weight is one of the critical issues in Gugare zone that causes many babies short-term and long-term health consequences and tends to h...

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Autores principales: Alemayehu, Gedif Mulat, Chernet, Ayele Gebeyehu, Dumga, Kassahun Trueha
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Avicenna Research Institute 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7253936/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32500017
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author Alemayehu, Gedif Mulat
Chernet, Ayele Gebeyehu
Dumga, Kassahun Trueha
author_facet Alemayehu, Gedif Mulat
Chernet, Ayele Gebeyehu
Dumga, Kassahun Trueha
author_sort Alemayehu, Gedif Mulat
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Birth weight plays an important role in infant mortality and morbidity, child development, and future health of the child. Reports showed that low birth weight is one of the critical issues in Gugare zone that causes many babies short-term and long-term health consequences and tends to have higher mortality and morbidity. This study examined and identified the determinants of weight of children at birth in Gurage zone. METHODS: The survey or the information has been collected on a total of 735,109 reproductive mothers in Gurage zone. Children with age less than 59 months were considered in this study. Ordinal logistic regression techniques used for data analysis using maternal and sociodemographic variables as explanatory variables and size of a baby at birth as the response variable and statistical package for social science (SPSS) version 23 and STATA were used for data analysis purpose. RESULTS: According to our study, from the sampled children, 30.1%, 44.4% and 25.5% were small in size, medium in size and large in size, respectively. Mater-nal related variables were statistically significant like uneducated mother (β=0.26, p= 0.013), mothers who get antenatal visit care 2–3 times (β=−0.210, p=0.10), source of drinking water (β=0.844, p<0.001) and malaria affected mothers (β=0.344, p< 0.001). CONCLUSION: Children from rural mothers, uneducated families, mothers who did not get more antenatal care visits, poor families, mothers who drink non -improved water, mothers who are affected by malaria during pregnancy, teen-ager mothers are small in size at birth.
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spelling pubmed-72539362020-06-03 Determinants of Child Size at Birth and Associated Maternal Factor in Gurage Zone Alemayehu, Gedif Mulat Chernet, Ayele Gebeyehu Dumga, Kassahun Trueha J Reprod Infertil Short Communication BACKGROUND: Birth weight plays an important role in infant mortality and morbidity, child development, and future health of the child. Reports showed that low birth weight is one of the critical issues in Gugare zone that causes many babies short-term and long-term health consequences and tends to have higher mortality and morbidity. This study examined and identified the determinants of weight of children at birth in Gurage zone. METHODS: The survey or the information has been collected on a total of 735,109 reproductive mothers in Gurage zone. Children with age less than 59 months were considered in this study. Ordinal logistic regression techniques used for data analysis using maternal and sociodemographic variables as explanatory variables and size of a baby at birth as the response variable and statistical package for social science (SPSS) version 23 and STATA were used for data analysis purpose. RESULTS: According to our study, from the sampled children, 30.1%, 44.4% and 25.5% were small in size, medium in size and large in size, respectively. Mater-nal related variables were statistically significant like uneducated mother (β=0.26, p= 0.013), mothers who get antenatal visit care 2–3 times (β=−0.210, p=0.10), source of drinking water (β=0.844, p<0.001) and malaria affected mothers (β=0.344, p< 0.001). CONCLUSION: Children from rural mothers, uneducated families, mothers who did not get more antenatal care visits, poor families, mothers who drink non -improved water, mothers who are affected by malaria during pregnancy, teen-ager mothers are small in size at birth. Avicenna Research Institute 2020 /pmc/articles/PMC7253936/ /pubmed/32500017 Text en Copyright© 2020, Avicenna Research Institute. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Short Communication
Alemayehu, Gedif Mulat
Chernet, Ayele Gebeyehu
Dumga, Kassahun Trueha
Determinants of Child Size at Birth and Associated Maternal Factor in Gurage Zone
title Determinants of Child Size at Birth and Associated Maternal Factor in Gurage Zone
title_full Determinants of Child Size at Birth and Associated Maternal Factor in Gurage Zone
title_fullStr Determinants of Child Size at Birth and Associated Maternal Factor in Gurage Zone
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of Child Size at Birth and Associated Maternal Factor in Gurage Zone
title_short Determinants of Child Size at Birth and Associated Maternal Factor in Gurage Zone
title_sort determinants of child size at birth and associated maternal factor in gurage zone
topic Short Communication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7253936/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32500017
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