Social inequalities in low birthweight outcomes in Sri Lanka: evidence from the Demographic and Health Survey 2016

Author:

Abeywickrama Gayathri,S Padmadas Sabu,Hinde AndrewORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveTo investigate social inequalities underlying low birthweight (LBW) outcomes in Sri Lanka.DesignCross-sectional study.SettingThis study used the Sri Lanka Demographic and Health Survey 2016, the first such survey to cover the entire country since the Civil War ended in 2001.ParticipantsBirthweight data extracted from the child health development records available for 7713 babies born between January 2011 and the date of interview in 2016.Outcome measuresThe main outcome variable was birth weight, classified as LBW (≤2500 g) and normal.MethodsWe applied random intercept three-level logistic regression to examine the association between LBW and maternal, socioeconomic and geographic variables. Concentration indices were estimated for different population subgroups.ResultsThe population-level prevalence of LBW was 16.9% but was significantly higher in the estate sector (28.4%) compared with rural (16.6%) and urban (13.6%) areas. Negative concentration indices suggest a relatively higher concentration of LBW in poor households in rural areas and the estate sector. Results from fixed effects logistic regression models confirmed our hypothesis of significantly higher risk of LBW outcomes across poorer households and Indian Tamil communities (AOR 1.70, 95% CI 1.02 to 2.83, p<0.05). Results from random intercept models confirmed there was substantial unobserved variation in LBW outcomes at the mother level. The effect of maternal biological variables was larger than that of socioeconomic factors.ConclusionLBW rates are significantly higher among babies born in poorer households and Indian Tamil communities. The findings highlight the need for nutrition interventions targeting pregnant women of Indian Tamil ethnicity and those living in economically deprived households.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

Reference32 articles.

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3. World Health Organization . Paradox of Healthcare in Sri Lanka: a Snapshot of the Last Decade from a Partnership of Sixty Years. Colombo: World Health Organization, 2014.. Available: https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/255195/ParadoxofhealthcareinSri%20Lanka.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y [Accessed 10 Jun 2019].

4. World Health Organization . Global Nutrition Targets 2025: Low Birth Weight Policy Brief. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2014. Available: https://www.who.int/nutrition/topics/globaltargets_lowbirthweight_policybrief.pdf[Accessed 10 Apr 2019].

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