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Journal Article

Citation

Shamebo D, Sandström A, Muhe L, Freij L, Krantz I, Lönnberg G, Wall S. Bull. World Health Organ. 1993; 71(3-4): 389-396.

Affiliation

Department of Community Health, Faculty of Medicine, Addis Ababa University, Ethiopia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1993, World Health Organization)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

8324859

PMCID

PMC2393508

Abstract

In Butajira district, Ethiopia (130 km south of Addis Ababa), 2 trained field workers went to each household of 306 5 children who died between October 1988 and September 1989 and of 612 age, sex, and study area matched referents to interview caretakers as part of a study analyzing determinants of 5 mortality, especially parental and environmental determinants. Leading causes of infant and child deaths were acute respiratory infections (ARI) (33 and 20%, respectively) and diarrheal disease (23 and 32%, respectively). The multivariate analysis showed that Silti ethnicity of the mother (odds ration = 1.74), paternal illiteracy (OR = 1.45), and nonmembership in people's organizations (OR = 1.95) were parental risk factors. All children with all 3 parental factors were at a 4.6 times higher risk of 5 mortality than those with no parental risk factors. Infants with 3 parental risk factors were at a considerably greater mortality risk than were 1-4 year old children with 3 parental risk factors (OR, 10.7 vs. 2.5). Children with 3 parental risk factors living in the highlands faced a higher risk of death than those in the lowlands (15.5 vs. 2.8). 3 parental risk factors carried a higher risk of mortality pursuant to ARI than to diarrhea (14.8 vs. 2.4). The only environmental risk factor was no window in the house (OR = 1.54). Absence of windows was especially risky for infants (OR = 2.7) and for children with ARI (OR = 1.8 vs. 1.3 with diarrhea). Lack of windows was linked to crowding and poor housing. Public health interventions to eliminate parental or environmental factors would result in 55% or 31% fewer deaths, respectively. These findings suggest that parental factors have a greater impact on 5 mortality than environmental factors and that both parental and environmental factors and that both parental and environmental factors have a greater impact on infant than on child mortality.


Language: en

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