Gender dimensions of the impact of HIV/AIDS on stunting in children under five years in Zimbabwe

Abstract Background HIV/AIDS can have a disastrous effect on household food and nutrition security outcomes such as stunting in children under 5. However, stunting and HIV/AIDS are highly gendered phenomena that need to be explored in order to get an in-depth understanding of the interrelationship....

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Main Authors: Lesley Macheka, George Kembo, Terrence Kairiza
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-07-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-11410-7
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spelling doaj-87222d1f5005427ab1eee1cdae5c8d332021-08-01T11:13:29ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582021-07-012111810.1186/s12889-021-11410-7Gender dimensions of the impact of HIV/AIDS on stunting in children under five years in ZimbabweLesley Macheka0George Kembo1Terrence Kairiza2Centre for Innovation and Technology Transfer, Marondera University of Agricultural Sciences and TechnologyFood and Nutrition Council of ZimbabweDepartment of Economics, Bindura University of Science EducationAbstract Background HIV/AIDS can have a disastrous effect on household food and nutrition security outcomes such as stunting in children under 5. However, stunting and HIV/AIDS are highly gendered phenomena that need to be explored in order to get an in-depth understanding of the interrelationship. This study was therefore aimed at investigating gender dimensions of the impact of HIV/AIDS on stunting in children under 5 years in Zimbabwe. Methods The study uses a large scale nationally representative cross-sectional dataset of 13,854 Zimbabwean households for the year 2019. To test hypothesis 1, the study employs binary choice models (Probit and Logit) since the outcome variable household HIV/AIDS status is dichotomous. To test hypothesis 2 and 3, the study employs the Propensity Score Matching (PSM) approach to circumvent the self-selection problem in the creation of treatment and control groups for households affected by HIV/AIDS and those that are not. Results The results revealed that household HIV/AIDS status is independent of the gender of household head. On the other hand, the results for the PSM estimates show that the probability of the household having a stunted child under 5 years is higher for households with an HIV positive member compared to those without. In addition, female headed households with an HIV positive member are more likely to have a stunted child under 5 years compared to male headed households under similar circumstances. Conclusion Overall, the results provide evidence of a higher risk of stunting among children from households affected by HIV/AIDS. The study offers three major findings. Firstly, the study finds no significant association between gender of the household head and household HIV/AIDS status. Secondly, households that have at least one HIV positive member are more likely to have a stunted child under 5 years. Lastly, female headed households with at least one HIV positive member are more likely to have a stunted child under 5 years compared to male headed household with similar HIV/AIDS status. The findings have important policy implications towards improved integration of HIV/AIDS status, household head gender and child nutrition services in affected households.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-11410-7HIV/AIDSGenderNutrition securityChild stuntingZimbabwe
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lesley Macheka
George Kembo
Terrence Kairiza
spellingShingle Lesley Macheka
George Kembo
Terrence Kairiza
Gender dimensions of the impact of HIV/AIDS on stunting in children under five years in Zimbabwe
BMC Public Health
HIV/AIDS
Gender
Nutrition security
Child stunting
Zimbabwe
author_facet Lesley Macheka
George Kembo
Terrence Kairiza
author_sort Lesley Macheka
title Gender dimensions of the impact of HIV/AIDS on stunting in children under five years in Zimbabwe
title_short Gender dimensions of the impact of HIV/AIDS on stunting in children under five years in Zimbabwe
title_full Gender dimensions of the impact of HIV/AIDS on stunting in children under five years in Zimbabwe
title_fullStr Gender dimensions of the impact of HIV/AIDS on stunting in children under five years in Zimbabwe
title_full_unstemmed Gender dimensions of the impact of HIV/AIDS on stunting in children under five years in Zimbabwe
title_sort gender dimensions of the impact of hiv/aids on stunting in children under five years in zimbabwe
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract Background HIV/AIDS can have a disastrous effect on household food and nutrition security outcomes such as stunting in children under 5. However, stunting and HIV/AIDS are highly gendered phenomena that need to be explored in order to get an in-depth understanding of the interrelationship. This study was therefore aimed at investigating gender dimensions of the impact of HIV/AIDS on stunting in children under 5 years in Zimbabwe. Methods The study uses a large scale nationally representative cross-sectional dataset of 13,854 Zimbabwean households for the year 2019. To test hypothesis 1, the study employs binary choice models (Probit and Logit) since the outcome variable household HIV/AIDS status is dichotomous. To test hypothesis 2 and 3, the study employs the Propensity Score Matching (PSM) approach to circumvent the self-selection problem in the creation of treatment and control groups for households affected by HIV/AIDS and those that are not. Results The results revealed that household HIV/AIDS status is independent of the gender of household head. On the other hand, the results for the PSM estimates show that the probability of the household having a stunted child under 5 years is higher for households with an HIV positive member compared to those without. In addition, female headed households with an HIV positive member are more likely to have a stunted child under 5 years compared to male headed households under similar circumstances. Conclusion Overall, the results provide evidence of a higher risk of stunting among children from households affected by HIV/AIDS. The study offers three major findings. Firstly, the study finds no significant association between gender of the household head and household HIV/AIDS status. Secondly, households that have at least one HIV positive member are more likely to have a stunted child under 5 years. Lastly, female headed households with at least one HIV positive member are more likely to have a stunted child under 5 years compared to male headed household with similar HIV/AIDS status. The findings have important policy implications towards improved integration of HIV/AIDS status, household head gender and child nutrition services in affected households.
topic HIV/AIDS
Gender
Nutrition security
Child stunting
Zimbabwe
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-11410-7
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