Kanamori Mariano, Carter-Pokras Olivia, Madhavan Sangeetha, Feldman Robert, He Xin, Lee Sunmin
a Center for Research on U.S. Latino HIV/AIDS and Drug Abuse , Florida International University , Miami , FL , USA.
AIDS Care. 2014;26(11):1336-45. doi: 10.1080/09540121.2014.921277. Epub 2014 Jun 3.
Enhancement of women's autonomy is a key factor for improving women's health and nutrition. With nearly 12 million orphan and vulnerable children (OVC) in Africa due to HIV/AIDS, the study of OVC primary caregivers' nutrition is fundamental. We investigated the association between married women's autonomy and their nutritional status; explored whether this relationship was modified by OVC primary caregiving; and analyzed whether decision-making autonomy mediated the association between household wealth and body mass index (BMI). This cross-sectional study used the data from Demographic Health Surveys collected during 2006-2007 from 20- to 49-year-old women in Namibia (n = 2633), Swaziland (n = 1395), and Zambia (n = 2920). Analyses included logistic regression, Sobel, and Goodman tests. Our results indicated that women's educational attainment increased the odds for being overweight (Swaziland and Zambia) and decreased the odds for being underweight (Namibia). In Zambia, having at least primary education increased the odds for being overweight only among child primary caregivers regardless of the OVC status of the child, and having autonomy for buying everyday household items increased the odds for being overweight only among OVC primary caregivers. Decision-making autonomy mediated the association between household wealth and OVC primary caregivers' BMI in Zambia (Z = 2.13, p value = 0.03). We concluded that depending on each country's contextual characteristics, having education can decrease the odds for being an underweight woman or increase the odds for being an overweight woman. Further studies should explore why in Namibia education has an effect on women's overweight status only among women who are caring for a child.
增强妇女的自主权是改善妇女健康和营养状况的关键因素。由于艾滋病毒/艾滋病,非洲有近1200万孤儿和弱势儿童,因此对孤儿和弱势儿童主要照料者的营养状况进行研究至关重要。我们调查了已婚妇女的自主权与其营养状况之间的关联;探讨了这种关系是否因照料孤儿和弱势儿童而有所改变;并分析了决策自主权是否介导了家庭财富与体重指数(BMI)之间的关联。这项横断面研究使用了2006 - 2007年期间在纳米比亚(n = 2633)、斯威士兰(n = 1395)和赞比亚(n = 2920)收集的20至49岁妇女的人口健康调查数据。分析包括逻辑回归、索贝尔检验和古德曼检验。我们的结果表明,妇女的教育程度增加了超重的几率(斯威士兰和赞比亚),并降低了体重不足的几率(纳米比亚)。在赞比亚,至少接受过小学教育仅在儿童主要照料者中增加了超重的几率,而不论儿童是否为孤儿和弱势儿童,并且在购买日常家居用品方面拥有自主权仅在孤儿和弱势儿童主要照料者中增加了超重的几率。在赞比亚,决策自主权介导了家庭财富与孤儿和弱势儿童主要照料者的BMI之间的关联(Z = 2.13,p值 = 0.03)。我们得出结论,根据每个国家的具体情况,接受教育可能会降低成为体重不足妇女的几率,或者增加成为超重妇女的几率。进一步的研究应探讨为什么在纳米比亚,教育仅对照顾孩子的妇女的超重状况产生影响。