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Impacts of forests on children’s diet in rural areas across 27 developing countries

机译:27个发展中国家的农村地区森林对儿童饮食的影响

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摘要

Micronutrient deficiency affects about a third of the world’s population. Children in developing countries are particularly vulnerable. Consequences include impaired cognitive and physical development and increased childhood morbidity and mortality. Recent studies suggest that forests help alleviate micronutrient deficiency by increasing dietary diversity. However, evidence is mostly based on weakly designed local case studies of limited relevance to global policies. Furthermore, impacts of forests on diet vary among communities, and understanding this variation can help target actions to enhance impact. We compile data on children’s diets in over 43,000 households across 27 developing countries to examine the impacts of forests on dietary diversity. We use empirical designs that are attentive to assumptions necessary for causal interpretations and that adequately account for confounding factors that could mask or mimic the impact. We find that high exposure to forests causes children to have at least 25% greater dietary diversity compared to lack of exposure, a result comparable to the impacts of some nutrition-sensitive agricultural programs. A closer look at a subset of African countries indicates that impacts are generally higher for less developed communities, but highest with certain access to markets, roads, and education. Our results also indicate that forests could help reduce vitamin A and iron deficiencies. Our study establishes the causal relationship between forests and diet and thus strengthens the evidence for integrating forest conservation and management into nutrition interventions. Our results also suggest that providing households some access to capital can increase the impact of forest-related interventions on nutrition.
机译:微量营养素缺乏症影响世界约三分之一的人口。发展中国家的儿童特别脆弱。后果包括认知和身体发育受损,儿童发病率和死亡率增加。最近的研究表明,森林通过增加饮食多样性来帮助缓解微量元素缺乏症。但是,证据主要基于与全球政策相关性有限的,设计不当的本地案例研究。此外,森林对饮食的影响在各个社区之间也各不相同,而了解这种变化可以帮助制定针对性措施以增强影响。我们汇总了27个发展中国家的43,000多个家庭的儿童饮食数据,以研究森林对饮食多样性的影响。我们使用的经验设计要注意因果关系解释所必需的假设,并且要充分考虑可能掩盖或模仿影响的混淆因素。我们发现,与缺乏森林接触相比,与森林的高度接触导致儿童的饮食多样性至少增加25%,这一结果与某些对营养敏感的农业计划的影响相当。仔细研究非洲国家的一个子集,表明对欠发达社区的影响通常较大,但对某些进入市场,道路和教育的机会影响最大。我们的结果还表明,森林可以帮助减少维生素A和铁的缺乏。我们的研究建立了森林与饮食之间的因果关系,从而加强了将森林保护和管理纳入营养干预措施的证据。我们的研究结果还表明,向家庭提供一些资本获取渠道可以增加与森林有关的干预措施对营养的影响。

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