Health / Health News

    Birth spacing can prevent stunting in children

    Having children at least three years apart can help prevent stunting in children, says a study carried out in India.



    A new study in India indicates that having children three years apart can prevent their stunting. Photo: Atul Loke/Overseas Development Institute


    The study, based on data of 223,662 children aged under five in India’s National Family Health Survey-4 (NFHS-4), carried out during 2015—2016, shows that firstborn children were typically taller than later-born children when the time interval between the births was less than three years. But if the time interval between the births was three years or more, then firstborn children have no height advantage.

    “Later-born children lag behind firstborns in stunting outcomes,” researchers wrote in a papers, adding that: “India’s family planning interventions have largely focused on reducing the total fertility rate with less attention given to length of birth spacing between children.”

    Of the 141 million under-five children reported as stunted in 2020, almost half (69 million) were from South Asia, with 90 per cent of them in India, according to the study.

    Prabhu Pingali, director of the Tata-Cornell Institute for Agriculture and Nutrition (TCI), US, which carried out the study, says stunting — measured by comparing average child height against that in a healthy reference population — is an important marker of chronic undernutrition, especially in developing countries.

    According to the researchers, children with stunting are prone to various childhood diseases and have significant risk for deficits in later life with respect to cognitive and intellectual abilities; they face problems around schooling, productivity and earning.

    Known causes of stunting include poverty, deficient diet, poor maternal health during pregnancy and breastfeeding, teen pregnancy and frequent illness. Considerable evidence also shows that birth order influences stunting, with children born after the first child at higher risk.

    Getting pregnant again too quickly may reduce the nutrients available to the foetus and limit milk production. Also, having children too close together makes it more difficult for parents to devote adequate time and resources to each child.

    “This paper takes on a semi-truth in the literature on child stunting that birth order has a significant negative effect on height outcomes,” Pingali tells. “Second child has a height disadvantage relative to first born and third child has an even higher disadvantage relative to the first born.”

    “Most developing country family planning programmes focus on reducing fertility rates; less emphasis is given to spacing between births. Our findings show the importance of increasing the time between births in order to ensure maternal and child health,” says Pingali. (SciDev.Net)

    MARCH 4, 2021



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