DIETARY HABITS AND NUTRITIONAL STATUS OF UPPER PRIMARY SCHOOL CHILDREN IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS IN URBAN SLUM COMMUNITIES IN IBADAN NORTH WEST LOCAL GOVERNMENT AREA
Abstract
The growing trend in the prevalence of malnutrition among school children has been
associated with inadequate and improper dietary habit(s). Increasing evidence suggests
that lifestyle and dietary habits have a lifelong correlation with the high propensity for
contraction of chronic diseases such as obesity, coronary heart disease, hypertension,
diabetes, certain types of cancer and death. There are few data available on the dietary
habits and nutritional status of upper primary school children in public schools in urban
slum communities in Ibadan. This study was undertaken to assess the dietary habits of
Upper primary school children in Public schools in urban slum communities in Ibadan
North West Local Government Area.
This study was a descriptive cross sectional study. A total of 422 primary school children
in upper classes were recruited from fourteen schools in the four wards of the urban
slums communities of IBNWLG using multi-stage sampling technique. A validated semistructured
interviewer’s questionnaire with an in-built dietary diversity which was scored
as low (1-3), medium (4-5) and high (≥6), food frequency questionnaire, anthropometric
measurements were used to collect socio-economic data, eating habits, factors
influencing eating habits, food frequency intake and physical observation, respectively.
The WHO’s Anthro-plus (2005) was used to determine the nutritional status of the school
children. Descriptive and inferential statistics were employed in data analysis. Level of
significance was placed at p<0.05.
The respondents’ mean age was 11.47 ±1.25 years; 33.7% of the respondents were in
primary six, 33.5% in primary five and 32.8% were in primary four. A total of 73.6% of
the respondents had breakfast on the day of interview. 26.1% of those who have not had
breakfast attributed it to having no money to eat. Hundred percent and (81.3%) of the
respondents occasionally consumed snacks and soft drinks respectively The dietary
diversity score in the group of the respondents were 40.1%, 53.8% and 5.2% as low,
medium and good dietary diversity score respectively. There was a significant
relationship between the respondents’ socio-economic status and their dietary diversity.
The Height-for-Age of the respondents revealed that a greater proportion (56.4%) of the
respondents were stunted while (84.4%) of the respondents had normal nutritional status
(BMI for age) and a few were undernourished (severely thin (3.1%), and thin (3.3%)
respectively). However, only a few were overweight (9.0%), and obese (0.2%)
respectively. There was a significant relationship between the socio-demographic status
age of the respondents and their nutritional status.
Poor dietary habit involved skipping of breakfast, high consumption of starchy staples
and soft drinks and low consumption of fruits is common among the study respondents.
Comprehensive nutritional interventions for students and their parents should be
implemented in the primary schools in the study area.
Subject
Nutritional statusDietary diversity
Upper primary school
Urban slum
Environmental sustainability
Ibadan
Description
A Project submitted to the Department of Health Promotion and Education, Faculty of Public Health, College of Medicine, University of Ibadan, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the award of the Degree of Master of Public Health (Health Promotion and Education) of the University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria.
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- Faculty of Public Health [443]