Household Nucleation, Dependency and Child Health Outcomes in Ghana

Type Journal Article - Journal of biosocial science
Title Household Nucleation, Dependency and Child Health Outcomes in Ghana
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2014
Page numbers 1-28
URL http://journals.cambridge.org/abstract_S0021932014000340
Abstract
This study uses three key anthropometric measures of nutritional status among children (stunting, wasting and underweight) to explore the dual effects of household composition and dependency on nutritional outcomes of under-five children in Ghana. The objective is to examine changes in household living arrangements of under-five children to explore the interaction of dependency and nucleation on child health outcomes. The concept of nucleation refers to the changing structure and composition of household living arrangements, from highly extended with its associated socioeconomic system of production and reproduction, social behaviour and values, towards single-family households – especially the nuclear family, containing a husband and wife and their children alone. A negative relationship between levels of dependency, as measured by the number of children in the household, and child health outcomes is premised on the grounds that high dependency depletes resources, both tangible and intangible, to the disadvantage of young children. Data were drawn from the last four rounds of the Ghana Demographic and Health Surveys (GDHSs), from 1993 to 2008, for the first objective – to explore changes in household composition. For the second objective, the study used data from the 2008 GDHS. The results show that, over time, households in Ghana have been changing towards nucleation. The main finding is that in households with the same number of dependent children, in nucleated households children under age 5 have better health outcomes compared with children under age 5 in nonnucleated households. The results also indicate that the effect of dependency on child health outcomes is mediated by household nucleation and wealth status
and that, as such, high levels of dependency do not necessarily translate into
negative health outcomes for children under age 5, based on anthropometric
measures.

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