Multilevel Determinants of Childhood Undernutrition among Low-Income Urban and Rural Households in the Philippines
Vanessa Siy Van,
Zarah Sales,
Normahitta Gordoncillo,
Leslie Advincula-Lopez,
Joselito Sescon and
Eden Delight Miro
Additional contact information
Vanessa Siy Van: Health Sciences Program, Ateneo de Manila University
Zarah Sales: Institute of Human Nutrition and Food, University of the Philippines Los Baños
Normahitta Gordoncillo: Institute of Human Nutrition and Food, University of the Philippines Los Baños
Leslie Advincula-Lopez: Development Studies Program, Ateneo de Manila University
Eden Delight Miro: Department of Mathematics, Ateneo de Manila University
No 202101, Department of Economics, Ateneo de Manila University, Working Paper Series from Department of Economics, Ateneo de Manila University
Abstract:
Poverty plays a large role in childhood undernutrition; however, the interplay between context-specific economic, environmental, and social factors and food decisions of Philippine low-income households has yet to be fully explored, especially given wide variation between the characteristics of the country’s rural and urban areas. This paper aimed to identify and compare pathways of childhood undernutrition among 308 rural and 310 urban children from low-income households in the Philippines. Multidisciplinary analyses based on 24-hour dietary recalls, household surveys, focus-group discussions, field data, and secondary literature revealed that while the poor are more vulnerable to undernutrition, poor urban and rural children faced unique constraints that accounted for differing nutritional outcomes. Urban families utilized cheap processed-foods that shaped children’s dietary preferences towards sugars and fats, leading to vegetable avoidance and poor micronutrient adequacy. Rural households generally relied on home food production. However, rather than mitigate threats to undernutrition, agriculture heightened rural households’ risk to food insecurity, as the Philippines is vulnerable to crop-destroying tropical storms. Geographically-isolated rural communities were particularly disadvantaged because members had limited livelihood opportunities and could not access most social protection programs. Our findings suggest the need to strengthen local governance institutions to implement context-specific multisectoral interventions.
Keywords: Philippines; child nutrition; urbanization; food security; poverty; health inequalities (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: I14 I38 R23 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 26 pages
Date: 2021-04
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-agr
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:agy:dpaper:202101
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