The Impact of Siblings’ Death on the Nutrition Status of Children in Peru
Open Access
- 1 December 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Food and Nutrition Bulletin
- Vol. 14 (4) , 1-11
- https://doi.org/10.1177/156482659201400411
Abstract
The impact of child deaths on the nutrition status of surviving children in the Lake Titicaca basin in the Andes of southern Peru (altitude>3,800 m) is explored. Survey data on obstetric history and social variables were collected in a random sample of 86 households in two Aymara and three Quechua Amerindian peasant communities. Independently of social factors, deaths among older siblings under five years old were associated with improved nutrition stature in children under four. Improved head circumference for age in boys was associated with the death of an older sister. The findings point to a new hypothesis concerning nutrition status in this population: mortality in children under five can be related to improved nutrition status (as evidenced by head circumference and height) in surviving siblings under four.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Socio-cultural determinants of child mortality in Southern Peru: Including some methodological considerationsSocial Science & Medicine, 1993
- Contributions of nutrition versus hypoxia to growth in rural Andean populationsAmerican Journal of Human Biology, 1990
- Altitude and childhood growthThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1988
- Mortality in children among the Aymara Indians of Southern PeruSocial Science & Medicine, 1988
- Altitude and birth weightThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1987
- Secular change in growth of native children and adolescents at high altitude Huancayo, Peru (3,280 meters)American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1984
- WEIGHT-FOR-AGE AS AN INDEX OF RISK OF DEATH IN CHILDRENThe Lancet, 1978
- Socio-Economic and Cultural Influences on Child Growth in Rural JamaicaJournal of Biosocial Science, 1970
- Occipitofrontal head circumference—an accurate measure of intracranial volumeThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1969
- Head circumference and cellular growth of the brain in normal and marasmic childrenThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1969