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Nutritional vulnerability transitions among rural households in Nigeria

Aims: It has long been considered that specific age/gender groups, such as women and children, are predisposed to nutritional vulnerability. Thus, nutritional vulnerability among agricultural households is neglected and understudied. This study aims at an empirical assessment of nutritional vulnerab...

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Published: 2023
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LEADER 00000njm a2000000a 4500
001 oai:repository.ui.edu.ng:123456789/12301
042 |a dc 
720 |a Adepoju, A. O.  |e author 
720 |a Adekunle, O.  |e author 
260 |c 2023 
520 |a Aims: It has long been considered that specific age/gender groups, such as women and children, are predisposed to nutritional vulnerability. Thus, nutritional vulnerability among agricultural households is neglected and understudied. This study aims at an empirical assessment of nutritional vulnerability dynamics among rural households in Nigeria. Study Design: Secondary data used for this study was waves 2 and 3 of the general household survey panel data. The sampling design consisted of two stages of sampling: the selection of enumeration areas based on probability proportionate to the size of the enumeration areas and the systematic random selection of ten households from each enumeration area. There were 3370 households selected in rural areas and 1630 households selected in urban areas. 2090 rural households with the required information for this study were included in the analysis. Methodology: Descriptive statistics, nutritional vulnerability score, logit regression model, Markov model, and multinomial logit regression models were used to analyse nutritional vulnerability transitions among rural households in Nigeria. Results: Nutritionally vulnerable households in rural Nigeria include those with aged heads, little or no formal education, limited assets, and no access to land or credit. Nutritional vulnerability in rural Nigeria is primarily transient, with around two-fifths of households experiencing transient nutritional vulnerability and nearly one-third experiencing chronic nutritional vulnerability. While the age of the household head, tertiary education, and access to credit all had a substantial impact on transient nutritional vulnerability, gender, tertiary education, asset value, and access to credit all had an impact on chronic nutritional vulnerability. Conclusion: Support mechanisms such as initiatives to promote access to healthy food, credit, land, and education are critical. To successfully address the issues affecting the nutrition and health of persons facing vulnerabilities, social welfare programs with interventions based on the characteristics of each vulnerable group and the predisposing factors should be adopted. 
024 8 |a 2347-5641 
024 8 |a ui_are_adepoju_nutritional_2023 
024 8 |a European Journal of Nutrition & Food Safety 15(6), pp. 1-13 
024 8 |a https://repository.ui.edu.ng/handle/123456789/12301 
653 |a Nutritional vulnerability 
653 |a Chronic 
653 |a Transient 
653 |a Rural households Nigeria 
245 0 0 |a Nutritional vulnerability transitions among rural households in Nigeria