Accounting for nutritional changes in six success stories: A regression-decomposition approach

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date Issued

Date Online

Language

en

Review Status

Peer Review

Access Rights

Open Access Open Access

Usage Rights

CC-BY-4.0

Share

Citation

Headey, Derek D.; Hoddinott, John F.; and Park, Seollee. 2017. Accounting for nutritional changes in six success stories: A regression-decomposition approach. Global Food Security 13(June 2017): 12-20. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gfs.2017.02.003

Permanent link to cite or share this item

External link to download this item

Abstract/Description

Over the past two decades, many developing countries have made impressive progress in reducing undernutrition. We explore potential explanations of this success by applying consistent statistical methods to multiple rounds of Demographic Health Surveys for Bangladesh, Nepal, Ethiopia, Odisha, Senegal, and Zambia. We find that changes in household wealth, mother's education and access to antenatal care are the largest drivers of nutritional improvement, except for Zambia where large increases in bednet usage is the single largest factor. Other factors play a smaller role in explaining nutritional improvements with improvements in sanitation only appearing to be important in South Asia. Overall, the results point to the need for multidimensional nutritional strategies involving a broad range of nutrition-sensitive sectors.

Author ORCID identifiers