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Young Children Who Eat Animal Sourced Foods Grow Less Stunted: Findings of Contemporaneous and Lagged Analyses from Nepal, Uganda and Bangladesh

Young Children Who Eat Animal Sourced Foods Grow Less Stunted: Findings of Contemporaneous and Lagged Analyses from Nepal, Uganda and Bangladesh

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dc.contributor.author Sonia Zaharia
dc.contributor.author Shibani Ghosh
dc.contributor.author Robin Shrestha
dc.contributor.author Swetha Manohar
dc.contributor.author Andrew Thorne-Lyman
dc.contributor.author Bernard Bashaasha
dc.contributor.author Nassul Kabunga
dc.contributor.author Sabi Gurung
dc.contributor.author Grace Namirembe
dc.contributor.author Katherine Heneveld
dc.contributor.author Lichen Liang
dc.contributor.author Patrick Webb
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-11T13:52:08Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-11T13:52:08Z
dc.date.issued 2020
dc.identifier.uri https://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/49879
dc.description.abstract Abstract; In resource constrained countries, animal-sourced foods (ASFs) are an important nutrient-dense source of vitamins, minerals and macronutrients. While several studies have suggested the value of ASFs to child growth, most empirical evidence is based on cross-sectional data which can only provide information about the contemporaneous relationship between diet and anthropometric outcomes. This study uses longitudinal panel data for Nepal, Bangladesh, and Uganda to assess the association between contemporaneous as well as past ASF consumption and linear growth of children aged 6-24 months. Fixed effects models found that ASF consumption was significantly correlated with lower stunting, with a decline in stunting prevalence as high as 10% in Nepali children who had consumed any ASF in the previous year. Consuming two or more ASFs showed an even higher magnitude of association, ranging from a 10% decline in prevalence of stunting associated with lagged consumption in Bangladesh to a 16% decline in Nepal.
dc.publisher Research Square
dc.title Young Children Who Eat Animal Sourced Foods Grow Less Stunted: Findings of Contemporaneous and Lagged Analyses from Nepal, Uganda and Bangladesh
dc.type Preprint
dc.identifier.doi 10.21203/rs.3.rs-74484/v1
dc.identifier.lens 182-793-450-535-057


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