4.6 Article

Prevalence and associated factors of common childhood illnesses in sub-Saharan Africa from 2010 to 2020: a cross-sectional study

Journal

BMJ OPEN
Volume 12, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-065257

Keywords

EPIDEMIOLOGY; Paediatric infectious disease & immunisation; Health policy; Public health

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This study aimed to assess the prevalence and determinants of common childhood illnesses in sub-Saharan Africa. Analysis of data from 33 countries showed a relatively high prevalence of common illnesses among under-5 children, with individual and community factors associated with the problem.
ObjectiveThis study aimed to assess the prevalence and determinants of common childhood illnesses in sub-Saharan Africa.DesignCross-sectional study.SettingSub-Saharan Africa.ParticipantsUnder-5 children.Primary outcomeCommon childhood illnesses.MethodsSecondary data analysis was conducted using data from recent Demographic and Health Survey datasets from 33 sub-Saharan African countries. We used the Kids Record dataset file and we included only children under the age of 5 years. A total weighted sample size of 208 415 from the pooled (appended) data was analysed. STATA V.14.2 software was used to clean, recode and analyse the data. A multilevel binary logistic regression model was fitted, and adjusted OR with a 95% CI and p value of <= 0.05 were used to declare significantly associated factors. To check model fitness and model comparison, intracluster correlation coefficient, median OR, proportional change in variance and deviance (-2 log-likelihood ratio) were used.ResultIn this study, the prevalence of common childhood illnesses among under-5 children was 50.71% (95% CI: 44.18% to 57.24%) with a large variation between countries which ranged from Sierra Leone (23.26%) to Chad (87.24%). In the multilevel analysis, rural residents, mothers who are currently breast feeding, educated mothers, substandard floor material, high community women education and high community poverty were positively associated with common childhood illnesses in the sub-Saharan African countries. On the other hand, children from older age mothers, children from the richest household and children from large family sizes, and having media access, electricity, a refrigerator and improved toilets were negatively associated.ConclusionsThe prevalence of common illnesses among under-5 children was relatively high in sub-Saharan African countries. Individual-level and community-level factors were associated with the problem. Improving housing conditions, interventions to improve toilets and strengthening the economic status of the family and the communities are recommended to reduce common childhood diseases.

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