埃塞俄比亚干旱紧急情况下严重粮食不安全和粮食消费不良的流行程度和风险因素。

IF 2.5
PLOS global public health Pub Date : 2025-09-11 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0004636
Noah Baker, Yunhee Kang, Gregory Makabila, Seifu Tadesse, Shannon Doocy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

频繁的干旱加剧了埃塞俄比亚的营养问题。本研究回顾性评估了干旱易发的埃塞俄比亚生产安全网计划家庭中严重粮食不安全和粮食消费不良的流行程度和风险因素。数据来自美国国际开发署资助的埃塞俄比亚东哈拉尔赫的弹性粮食安全活动基线调查。重度粮食不安全(n = 4628,多变量n = 4335)定义为粮食不安全体验量表(≥7),不良食品消费(n = 4554,多变量n = 4268)定义为食品消费评分(≤21)。Logistic回归确定了危险因素和保护因素的校正优势比和95%置信区间。严重粮食不安全患病率为77.79%,不良粮食消费患病率为69.74%。严重粮食不安全的危险因素包括15-19岁的妇女/女孩(1.79;1.36-2.34),目前怀孕(1.51;1.17-1.96),怀孕史(3.46;2.76-4.33),赚钱工作(1.35;1.12-1.61),每日人均粮食消费量
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Prevalence and risk factors for severe food insecurity and poor food consumption during a drought emergency in Ethiopia.

Prevalence and risk factors for severe food insecurity and poor food consumption during a drought emergency in Ethiopia.

Prevalence and risk factors for severe food insecurity and poor food consumption during a drought emergency in Ethiopia.

Prevalence and risk factors for severe food insecurity and poor food consumption during a drought emergency in Ethiopia.

Frequent drought has heightened nutritional concerns in Ethiopia. This study retrospectively assesses the prevalence and risk factors of severe food insecurity and poor food consumption in Productive Safety Net Programme households in drought-prone Ethiopia. Data was from the USAID-funded Resilience Food Security Activity baseline survey in East Hararghe, Ethiopia. Severe food insecurity (n = 4628; multivariate n = 4335) was defined as Food Insecurity Experience Scale (≥7) and poor food consumption (n = 4554; multivariate n = 4268) was defined as Food Consumption Score (≤21). Logistic regression identified adjusted odds ratio and 95% confidence interval of risk and protective factors. Severe food insecurity prevalence was 77.79% and poor food consumption was 69.74%. Risk factors for severe food insecurity included women/girls aged 15-19 (1.79; 1.36-2.34), current pregnancy (1.51; 1.17-1.96), history of pregnancy (3.46; 2.76-4.33), cash-earning work (1.35; 1.12-1.61), daily-per-capita food consumption <1.61USD (2.98; 1.91-4.66), crop-planting (1.67; 1.31-2.13), and handwashing facilities (3.83; 1.92-7.63); protective factors included two or more children-under-5 (0.72; 0.60-0.88), raising livestock/crops to sell (0.50; 0.42-0.60), and raising oxen (0.34; 0.26-0.45). Risk factors for poor food consumption included woman/girl (1.44; 1.15-1.81) and household-head no education (1.46; 1.18-1.79), daily-per-capita food consumption <1.61USD (4.01; 2.58-6.21), and financial services (2.10; 1.69-2.59); protective factors included women/girls aged 15-19 (0.59; 0.46-0.76) and 30-49 (0.76; 0.63-0.91), two or more children-under-5 (0.77; 0.64-0.91), current pregnancy (0.57; 0.47-0.70), history of pregnancy (0.70; 0.55-0.89), crop-planting (0.57; 0.44-0.75), raising livestock/crops to sell (0.40; 0.34-0.48) and raising oxen (0.68; 0.52-0.90). Vulnerable households included those with pregnant/lactating women, mothers, adolescent girls/women, no education, low assets, and no livestock. Our findings highlight a conceptual distinction, women/girls pregnancy and/or age status may influence household perception and/or definitions of food security despite reporting adequate consumption. The dual burden of food insecurity and poor consumption threatens current and future generations, and data-driven action can help progress towards the goal of zero hunger in Ethiopia.

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