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Poverty contributing to poor growth in Nigerian children – Study

 

 

This news was culled from The PUNCH Newspaper’s publication of 6 May 2022

 

 

 

 

POVERTY, food taboos, child diseases and absence of immunisation have been identified as factors responsible for the retardation of growth in children in some parts of Nigeria.

 

A study conducted by Global Exemplars in Stunting Reduction and Countdown to 2030, using Nigeria as a country case study, came up with the observation.

 

It called for renewed political will by governments to reverse the trend.

 

The study was led by Prof. Adebola Orimadegun of the Institute of Child Health, College of Medicine, University of Ibadan and Prof. Ayodele Jegede of the Department of Sociology, University of Ibadan.

 

Speaking with the News Agency of Nigeria on Thursday in Ibadan, the duo highlighted the findings of the study.

 

They indicated that the study identified key drivers of stunting in Nigeria, using UNICEF’s contextual framework to prove it.

 

Orimadegun told NAN, however, that Nigeria made modest progress in stunting reduction between 1990 and 2018, when compared with some African countries.

 

 

“Overall, our study showed that Nigeria made modest progress in stunting reduction between 1990 and 2018, when compared with Senegal, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Peru, and Uganda.

 

“We also found remarkable variation in the average annual rate of change in stunting reduction across the 36 states of Nigeria.

 

“The picture appears to show an essentially slower rate of reduction in most parts of the north than in the south of Nigeria.

 

“The states that achieved more than a 0.8 per cent average annual rate of stunting reduction are Benue, Nasarawa, Kogi, Kwara, Niger, and Plateau in the north.

 

“In the south Akwa Ibom, Edo, Delta, Ebonyi, Ondo, Osun, Ekiti, Ogun, and Rivers also recorded a reduction in stunting,’’ he said.

 

Orimadegun noted that increased wealth, education and improved sanitation were the drivers of stunting reduction in Nigeria and called for sustained government intervention to achieve significant reduction by 2030.

 

“From our findings, it will be reasonable to advise the Nigerian government and stakeholders in Nigeria’s nutrition-specific and related programmes to intensify efforts at poverty reduction.

 

“This will enhance the ability to purchase nutritious foods at the household level.

 

“Promotion of maternal education at every opportunity, beginning with further investment in girl-child education, will go a long way to accelerate stunting reduction.

 

“Access to and utilisation of health services such as antenatal care, malaria prevention, water and sanitation are primary promoters of stunting reduction, and indicate areas for governments’ immediate interventions,’’ he said.

 

 

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