19 May 2021
Children whose mothers don’t finish high school are more likely to be stunted than those whose mothers did complete high school, according to a study conducted by the Grow Great Campaign and Stellenbosch University.
Stunting means a child does not grow to the height they potentially could have. It happens if children don’t get enough nutrition. The World Health Organisation has a technical definition of it: a child is stunted if their height is two or more standard deviations below the median height for their age.
The study, run between July and October 2018, looked at the prevalence and causes of stunting in children under five years in Worcester, Western Cape. It included the responses of 854 mothers between 18 and 50 from Zwelethemba, Riverview, Avian Park and Roodewal.
The mothers were asked questions about their child’s health and nutrition, access to basic services and a child support grant, employment status, and their highest level of education.
Incomplete use of deworming medication and lack of diet diversity were significantly associated with stunting.
More than 60% of the mothers in the study did not complete high school; higher than the national school dropout rate of 40%. The odds that a mother who completed high school had a stunted child was 35% lower than mothers who dropped out.
Speaking at the virtual launch of the report on 13 May, Dr Kopano Matlwa Mabaso of Grow Great Campaign said, “Stunting has long term impacts on cognitive development. It’s associated with education and employment challenges in adulthood, increasing the risk of chronic diseases and cycles of intergenerational poverty.”
Of the children in the study, 26% (216, of whom 81 were severely stunted) suffered from stunting which is a touch higher than the provincial estimate of 23%. The national estimate for stunted children is 27%.
“The prevalence of stunting in our context is worryingly high with little progress being made over the last few decades and prevalence rates that far exceed what would be expected for an upper-middle-income country such as ours, and are far higher than our developing country counterparts,” said Mabaso.
Anna-Marie Müller of Grow Great made the point that stunting has consequences for how a child does educationally, creating a cycle of poverty which that child’s future family is trapped in.
According to the study, mothers who have not completed schooling are consequently denied “the opportunity to participate in the South African formal economy” and to improve their socioeconomic status. This places the child at a greater risk of stunting.
To reduce stunting in children from young mothers, the report recommends that communities invest in improving access to contraception for high school learners, and making sure that learners who do have children get decent child-care so that they can continue going to school while their child is taken care of.
The study also said that the Covid-19 pandemic, with the consequent increase in unemployment and food insecurity, may have worsened nutrition for children under five in Worcester.
“Our hope is that this data will inspire community-level action against stunting,” said Mabaso.