Determinants of acute respiratory infection among under-five children in rural Ethiopia.

Amanuel Mengistu Merera
Author Information
  1. Amanuel Mengistu Merera: Department of Statistics, College of Natural and Computational Science, Mizan-Tepi University, Tepi, Ethiopia. emanuelmng9@gmail.com. ORCID

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: In low- and middle-income nations, acute respiratory infection (ARI) is the primary cause of morbidity and mortality. According to some studies, Ethiopia has a higher prevalence of childhood acute respiratory infection, ranging from 16 to 33.5%. The goal of this study was to determine the risk factors for acute respiratory infection in children under the age of five in rural Ethiopia.
METHODS: A cross-sectional study involving 7911 children under the age of five from rural Ethiopia was carried out from January 18 to June 27, 2016. A two stage cluster sampling technique was used recruit study subjects and SPSS version 20 was used to extract and analyze data. A binary logistic regression model was used to identify factors associated with a childhood acute respiratory infection. The multivariable logistic regression analysis includes variables with a p-value less than 0.2 during the bivariate logistic regression analysis. Adjusted odds ratios were used as measures of effect with a 95% confidence interval (CI) and variables with a p-value less than 0.05 were considered as significantly associated with an acute respiratory infection.
RESULTS: The total ARI prevalence rate among 7911 under-five children from rural Ethiopia was 7.8%, according to the findings of the study. The highest prevalence of ARI was found in Oromia (12.8%), followed by Tigray (12.7%), with the lowest frequency found in Benishangul Gumuz (2.4%). A multivariable logistic regression model revealed that child from Poor household (AOR = 2.170, 95% CI: 1.631-2.887), mother's no education (AOR = 2.050,95% CI: 1.017-4.133), mother's Primary education (AOR = 2.387, 95% CI:1.176-4.845), child had not received vitamin A (AOR = 1.926, 95% CI:1.578-2.351), child had no diarrhea (AOR = 0.257, 95% CI: 0.210-0.314), mothers not working (AOR = 0.773, 95% CI:0.630-0.948), not stunted (AOR = 0.663, 95% CI: 0.552-0.796), and not improved water source (AOR = 1.715, 95% CI: 1.395-2.109). Similarly, among under-five children, the age of the child, the month of data collection, anemia status, and the province were all substantially linked to ARI.
CONCLUSIONS: Childhood ARI morbidity is a serious health challenge in rural Ethiopia, according to this study, with demographic, socioeconomic, nutritional, health, and environmental factors all having a role. As a result, regional governments, healthcare staff, and concerned groups should place a priority on reducing ARI, and attempts to solve the issue should take these variables into account.

Keywords

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MeSH Term

Cross-Sectional Studies
Ethiopia
Female
Humans
Infant
Prevalence
Respiratory Tract Infections
Risk Factors
Rural Population

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.095%respiratoryacuteinfectionARIEthiopiachildrenstudyruralCI:usedlogisticregression0childprevalencefactorsagevariablesamongunder-fiveAOR = 21AOR = 0morbiditychildhoodfive7911datamodelassociatedmultivariableanalysisp-valueless28%accordingfound12mother'seducationCI:1AOR = 1healthINTRODUCTION:low-middle-incomenationsprimarycausemortalityAccordingstudieshigherranging16335%goaldetermineriskMETHODS:cross-sectionalinvolvingcarriedJanuary18June272016twostageclustersamplingtechniquerecruitsubjectsSPSSversion20extractanalyzebinaryidentifyincludesbivariateAdjustedoddsratiosmeasureseffectconfidenceintervalCI05consideredsignificantlyRESULTS:totalrate7findingshighestOromiafollowedTigray7%lowestfrequencyBenishangulGumuz4%revealedPoorhousehold170631-2887050017-4133Primary387176-4845receivedvitamin926578-2351diarrhea257210-0314mothersworking773CI:0630-0948stunted663552-0796improvedwatersource715395-2109SimilarlymonthcollectionanemiastatusprovincesubstantiallylinkedCONCLUSIONS:ChildhoodseriouschallengedemographicsocioeconomicnutritionalenvironmentalroleresultregionalgovernmentshealthcarestaffconcernedgroupsplacepriorityreducingattemptssolveissuetakeaccountDeterminantsAcuteinfectionsEDHSLogisticRegressionUnder-five

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