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Malnutrition high among babies born to child brides

Infants born to child brides married before the age of 18 face a higher risk of malnutrition than children born to older mothers, according to research published recently

Despite significant economic growth in the past decade, India still has the highest number of under-5 deaths in the world. Almost half (44.5%) of 20-24-year-olds in India are married before they are 18, and almost a quarter (22%) of the same age-group have given birth by the time they reach 18. 

A study, published online by the British Medical Journal (BMJ), speculates that child brides get sidelined by husbands and their in-laws and thus cannot lobby for food for their children. 

The authors, led by Associate Professor Anita Raj from Boston University School of Public Health, investigated the relationship between early marriage and infant and child mortality-related infection in India. 

Professor Raj and colleagues analysed the data of a representative sample of almost 125,000 Indian women between the ages of 15 and 49. The information was collected from the 2005-2006 National Family Health Survey. 

The study was restricted to births that took place in the last five years to women who had been married between the ages of 15 and 24 -- this included over 19,000 births to almost 13,500 mothers. 

The results show that the majority of births (73%) were born to child brides. Among the currently living children, the majority (67%) were malnourished -- meaning they were either underweight or suffering from wasted or stunted growth. 

The authors argue that “in view of previous evidence that child brides often are more controlled by husbands and in-laws, it may be that women married as minors are unable to advocate for adequate nutrition for their children”. 

Professor Raj concludes that the findings “emphasise the value of delayed childbearing among adolescent wives. They also reveal the need for targeted intervention efforts to support children born to mothers married as minors, who may be more vulnerable to nutritional deprivation than others in the family”.  

Source: AFP, January 22, 2010
            http://www.eurekalert.org, January 2010 



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