Women's empowerment, children's nutritional status, and the mediating role of household headship structure: Evidence from sub‐Saharan Africa
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Maternal Child Nutrition
Abstract
We aimed to examine the association between women's empowerment and
childhood nutritional status while accounting for the mediating role of household
headship structure. Cross‐country, cross‐sectional quantitative data from the most
recent Demographic and Health Surveys (2015–2018) were used. Women's
empowerment was measured as a composite index of participation in household
decision‐making, attitude towards domestic violence, and asset ownership.
Childhood nutrition status was measure as anaemia (haemoglobin concentration
< 110g/L), stunting (height‐for‐age z‐scorescore <−2) and the co‐occurrence of
anaemia and stunting. Applying the Lewbel two‐stage least squares, women's
migration status was used as an instrumental variable. We used data on 25,665
woman‐child dyads from eight sub‐Saharan African countries: Burundi (2016),
Ethiopia (2016), Guinea (2018), Malawi (2016), Mali (2018), Zimbabwe (2015),
Uganda (2016), and Tanzania (2015). The women were in their reproductive ages
(15–49 years) and children were under 5 years old. The findings showed that an
increase in women's empowerment index reduces children's likelihood of being
anaemic and having a co‐occurrence of anaemia and stunting [coeff (SE), −0.114
(0.025) and −0.072 (0.032), respectively]. Specifically, an increase in asset ownership
or decision‐making dimensions of empowerment significantly reduces the likelihood
of anaemia and the co‐occurrence of anaemia and stunting among children. Children
of empowered women from male‐headed households were more likely to be
anaemic and be concurrently anaemic and stunted compared to their counterparts
whose mothers were from female‐headed households. Interventions designed to
improve childhood nutrition through women's empowerment approaches need to
consider asset ownership and instrumental agency of women while acknowledging
the mediating effect of household headship typology.
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Research Article