The Impact of Civil Conflict on Child Malnutrition and Mortality, Nigeria, 2002-2013
Preprint
- 29 August 2018
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier BV in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
The new millennium brought renewed attention to improving the health of women and children. In this same period, direct deaths from conflicts have declined worldwide, but civilian deaths associated with conflicts have increased. Nigeria is among the most conflict-prone countries in sub-Saharan Africa, especially recently with the Boko Haram insurgency in the north. This paper uses two data sources, the 2013 Demographic and Health Survey for Nigeria and the Social Conflict Analysis Database, linked by geocode, to study the effect of these conflicts on child health. We show a strong association between living close to a conflict zone and acute malnutrition in Nigerian children in 2013. This is related to the severity of the conflict, measured both in terms of the number of conflict deaths and the length of time the child was exposed to conflict. The association with mortality is much less clear, with essentially no significant relationship to conflict detected using these data for the period studied. Undoubtedly civil conflict is limiting the future prospects of Nigerian children and the country’s economic growth. In Nigeria conflicts in the north are expected to continue with sporadic attacks and continued damaged infrastructure. Thus, the children in Nigeria will continue to suffer the consequences documented in this study.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Drought, conflict and children’s undernutrition in Ethiopia 2000–2013: a meta-analysisBulletin of the World Health Organization, 2017
- Effect of Conflict on Dietary Diversity: Evidence from Côte d’IvoireWorld Development, 2014
- Wars and child health: Evidence from the Eritrean–Ethiopian conflictJournal of Development Economics, 2012
- Social Conflict in Africa: A New DatabaseInternational Interactions, 2012
- Civil WarJournal of Economic Literature, 2010
- Forced migration and child health and mortality in AngolaSocial Science & Medicine (1982), 2010
- A public health framework to translate risk factors related to political violence and war into multi-level preventive interventionsSocial Science & Medicine (1982), 2010
- Bias in Epidemiological Studies of Conflict MortalityJournal of Peace Research, 2008
- Mortality in the Democratic Republic of Congo: a nationwide surveyThe Lancet, 2006
- Effect of the Gulf War on Infant and Child Mortality in IraqThe New England Journal of Medicine, 1992