wow-inequalities/02-data/intermediate/wos_sample/342359a1505245079c1b0c7317668919-kismul-hallgeir-and/info.yaml

113 lines
3.6 KiB
YAML
Raw Normal View History

2023-09-28 14:46:10 +00:00
abstract: 'Introduction: The magnitude of child malnutrition including severe child
malnutrition is especially high in the rural areas of the Democratic
Republic of Congo (the DRC). The aim of this qualitative study is to
describe the social context of malnutrition in a rural part of the DRC
and explore how some households succeed in ensuring that their children
are well-nourished while others do not.
Methodology: This study is based on participant observation, key
informant interviews, group discussions and in-depth interviews with
four households with malnourished children and four with well-nourished
children. We apply social field theory to link individual child
nutritional outcomes to processes at local level and to the wider
socio-economic environment.
Findings: We identified four social fields that have implications for
food security and child nutritional outcomes: 1) household size and
composition which determined vulnerability to child malnutrition, 2)
inter-household cooperation in the form of `gbisa work party'' which
buffered scarcity of labour in peak seasons and facilitated capital
accumulation, 3) the village associated with usufruct rights to land,
and 4) the local NGO providing access to agricultural support, clean
drinking water and health care.
Conclusions: Households that participated in inter-household cooperation
were able to improve food and nutrition security. Children living in
households with high pressure on productive members were at danger of
food insecurity and malnutrition. Nutrition interventions need to
involve local institutions for inter-household cooperation and address
the problem of social inequalities in service provision. They should
have special focus on households with few resources in the form of land,
labour and capital.'
affiliation: 'Kismul, H (Corresponding Author), Univ Bergen, Ctr Int Hlth, N-5009
Bergen, Norway.
Kismul, Hallgeir; Van den Broeck, Jan; Moland, Karen Marie, Univ Bergen, Ctr Int
Hlth, N-5009 Bergen, Norway.
Hatloy, Anne, Fafo, N-0608 Oslo, Norway.
Andersen, Peter, Univ Bergen, Dept Geog, N-5020 Bergen, Norway.
Mapatano, Mala, Univ Kinshasa, Sch Publ Hlth, Kinshasa 1, DEM REP CONGO.'
article-number: '47'
author: Kismul, Hallgeir and Hatloy, Anne and Andersen, Peter and Mapatano, Mala and
Van den Broeck, Jan and Moland, Karen Marie
author-email: hallgeir.kismul@cih.uib.no
author_list:
- family: Kismul
given: Hallgeir
- family: Hatloy
given: Anne
- family: Andersen
given: Peter
- family: Mapatano
given: Mala
- family: Van den Broeck
given: Jan
- family: Moland
given: Karen Marie
da: '2023-09-28'
doi: 10.1186/s12939-015-0175-x
eissn: 1475-9276
files: []
journal: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH
keywords: 'Malnutrition; Marasmus; Kwashiorkor; Food security; Subsistence
agriculture; Social inequality; Social capital; The Democratic Republic
of Congo'
keywords-plus: 'HEALTH-CARE; FOOD SECURITY; LAND-TENURE; NUTRITION; GENDER; INEQUALITY;
URBAN; DIFFERENTIALS; MORTALITY; UNDERNUTRITION'
language: English
month: MAY 19
number-of-cited-references: '88'
orcid-numbers: Hatloy, Anne/0000-0002-3668-3216
papis_id: e2fe6482691bdabb961f71eccd387ec1
ref: Kismul2015socialcontext
times-cited: '10'
title: 'The social context of severe child malnutrition: a qualitative household case
study from a rural area of the Democratic Republic of Congo'
2023-10-01 08:15:07 +00:00
type: article
2023-09-28 14:46:10 +00:00
unique-id: WOS:000355174100001
usage-count-last-180-days: '0'
usage-count-since-2013: '27'
volume: '14'
web-of-science-categories: Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health
year: '2015'