combine@alvar.ug

Housing, water and sanitation implications on food insecurity and diet diversity in landslide affected communities: A cross-sectional survey of two districts in Uganda

Housing, water and sanitation implications on food insecurity and diet diversity in landslide affected communities: A cross-sectional survey of two districts in Uganda

Show simple record

dc.contributor.author Peter Milton Rukundo
dc.contributor.author Byaruhanga Rukooko
dc.contributor.author Bård A. Andreassen
dc.contributor.author Per Ole Iversen
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-10T11:55:45Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-10T11:55:45Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.issn 24054577
dc.identifier.uri https://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/49160
dc.description.abstract Summary Background The major landslide of 2010 in Bududa district in Eastern Uganda is the most catastrophic natural disaster in Uganda's recorded history. An estimated 350 people died and some of the affected were resettled in Kiryandongo district. We assessed housing, water and sanitation practises of affected households and controls to establish possible implications on food insecurity and diet diversity. Methods This cross-sectional study assessed 1078 affected and control households in Bududa and Kiryandongo districts. The head of the households were either affected, selected from landslide disaster-affected communities, or controls from a random sub-county bordering the affected. Structured interviews were used and entries were tested statistically to report crude estimates based on the Pearson x2 and ANOVA, while adjusted analysis used multivariate analysis of co-variance (MANCOVA) and Wald's Odds Ratio (OR) of Binary Logistic Regression at the 95% CI. Results On adjusting for the disaster and covariates, households who had insufficient access to water scored higher mean (SE) on food insecurity than those who reported sufficient access: 13.1 (0.4) vs. 9.5 (0.3) (P  Conclusion Disaster, food security and diet were sensitive to housing, water and sanitation and were integral to an adequate standard of living of victims of this landslide.
dc.publisher Elsevier Limited
dc.relation.ispartof Clinical nutrition ESPEN
dc.subject Diet diversity
dc.subject Food insecurity
dc.subject Housing
dc.subject Sanitation
dc.subject Water
dc.subject.mesh Cross-Sectional Studies
dc.subject.mesh Diet
dc.subject.mesh Disasters
dc.subject.mesh Family Characteristics
dc.subject.mesh Focus Groups
dc.subject.mesh Food Supply/statistics & numerical data
dc.subject.mesh Health Surveys
dc.subject.mesh Housing/statistics & numerical data
dc.subject.mesh Humans
dc.subject.mesh Landslides
dc.subject.mesh Odds Ratio
dc.subject.mesh Sanitation/statistics & numerical data
dc.subject.mesh Surveys and Questionnaires
dc.subject.mesh Uganda
dc.subject.mesh Water Supply/statistics & numerical data
dc.title Housing, water and sanitation implications on food insecurity and diet diversity in landslide affected communities: A cross-sectional survey of two districts in Uganda
dc.type journal article
dc.identifier.doi 10.1016/j.clnesp.2019.07.010
dc.identifier.pmid 31451275
dc.identifier.mag 2965118775
dc.identifier.lens 058-612-390-678-855
dc.identifier.volume 33
dc.identifier.spage 47
dc.identifier.epage 56
dc.subject.lens-fields Cross-sectional study
dc.subject.lens-fields Standard of living
dc.subject.lens-fields Logistic regression
dc.subject.lens-fields Odds ratio
dc.subject.lens-fields Landslide
dc.subject.lens-fields Sanitation
dc.subject.lens-fields Multivariate analysis
dc.subject.lens-fields Food security
dc.subject.lens-fields Medicine
dc.subject.lens-fields Environmental health


This record appears in the collections of the following institution(s)

Show simple record

Search Entire Database


Browse

My Account