Impact of Socioeconomic and Demographic Factors Affecting Child Health in Selected South Asian Countries

Authors

  • Sofia Anwar Professor and chairperson, Department of Economics, Government College University Faisalabad, Pakistan
  • Maria Khushbakhet MPhil Scholar, Department of Economics, Government College University Faisalabad, Pakistan
  • Aisha Asif PhD Scholar, Department of Economics, Government College University Faisalabad, Pakistan
  • Zahira Batool Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, Government College University Faisalabad, Pakistan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26710/reads.v1i2.120

Keywords:

Child health, Body Mass index, Mother health, Working mothers, Safe water, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal

Abstract

Development of any nation is estimated through child health condition.
In particular, the fourth millennium development goal out of eight is to
reduce the mortality rate. The target set under this goal was to reduce by
two-third, between 1990 and 2015, the proportion of child mortality.
Maternal BMI is closely associated with child nutritional status. Weak
mother having low BMI has low nutrition status which effect child
weight. Healthy and balance food of mothers have positive effect on their
child. Underweight mother can have impaired and poor growing kids.
This study presents impact of some socio-economic demographic and
maternal health related factors on health status of children in selected
South Asian countries i.e. Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal. The study
used micro data from demographic and health survey (DHS) of Pakistan,
Bangladesh and Nepal. Multinomial logistic regression results revealed
that mother education, mother working status, mother health, availability
of safe drinking water, family size and vaccination have significant effect
on child health. Mother’s education is positively associated with healthy
child. Working mothers are more likely to have healthy child. Weak and
obese children are positively associated with malnourished and
overweight mothers respectively. Small family size has positive impact
on weak child health. Vaccination and availability of improved and safe
water are positively associated with child health.

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Published

2020-07-25

How to Cite

Sofia Anwar, Maria Khushbakhet, Aisha Asif, & Zahira Batool. (2020). Impact of Socioeconomic and Demographic Factors Affecting Child Health in Selected South Asian Countries. Review of Economics and Development Studies, 1(2), 143-151. https://doi.org/10.26710/reads.v1i2.120