2018
DOI: 10.2105/ajph.2017.304128
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Climate, Birth Weight, and Agricultural Livelihoods in Kenya and Mali

Abstract: Objectives. To examine an association between climate variability and birth weight in Mali and Kenya in relation to the local agricultural specialization. Methods. We combined health and sociodemographic data from the Demographic Health Surveys for Kenya (2008 and 2014) and Mali (2006 and 2012) with detailed data on precipitation, temperature, and vegetation. We analyzed the association between climate variability and birth weight by using multilevel regression models for the most common agricultural speciali… Show more

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Cited by 50 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…Finally, changing temperature and precipitation patterns could also affect child nutritional directly such as through the physiological costs of extreme heat, including prenatally via the health of the mother (Andalón et al 2016;Bakhtsiyarava et al 2018;Basu et al 2018;Deschênes et al 2009;Grace et al 2015;Molina and Saldarriaga 2017). Environmental changes may affect child malnutrition through any of these pathways.…”
Section: Climatic Variability and Child Nutritionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, changing temperature and precipitation patterns could also affect child nutritional directly such as through the physiological costs of extreme heat, including prenatally via the health of the mother (Andalón et al 2016;Bakhtsiyarava et al 2018;Basu et al 2018;Deschênes et al 2009;Grace et al 2015;Molina and Saldarriaga 2017). Environmental changes may affect child malnutrition through any of these pathways.…”
Section: Climatic Variability and Child Nutritionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Third, early exposure to climatic variability may alter developmental processes central to human capital formation, which may affect migration by shaping later-life socioeconomic outcomes that are correlated with geographic mobility (Gray 2009;Mberu 2005;Williams 2009). Prenatal and early childhood exposure to climatic variability has been linked to fluctuations in birthweight and the prevalence of child malnutrition and related illnesses (Bakhtsiyarava et al, 2018;Bandyopadhyay et al 2012;Davenport et al 2017;Grace et al, 2012Grace et al, , 2015Hoddinott & Kinsey 2001;Randell et al, 2020;Thiede and Gray, 2020). These conditions are known to cause substantial and sometimes irreversible changes in cognitive development, socioeconomic attainment, and health over the life course (Almond and Currie, 2011;Hayward and Gorman 2004;Maccini and Yang, 2009;Randell and Gray 2019;Torche and Conley 2016).…”
Section: Early-life Climate and Lifetime Migrationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since the seminal book, People and Pixels (Liverman et al 1998), the rapid growth of remote sensing technologies to explore SES questions has contributed to theoretical development in ways not previously possible. While most research has focused on land-use and land-cover mapping and change detection (Pricope et al 2019), SES researchers continue to explore new applications, including epidemiology and environmental health sciences (Meentemeyer et al 2012), fire regimes (Dennis et al 2005), food security (Bakhtsiyarava et al 2018), compliance and enforcement of environmental laws (Purdy 2010), and the continued influence of land-use legacies (Maezumi et al 2018). Remote sensing technologies are increasingly being combined with traditional and innovative social science methods to develop and test SES hypotheses at multiple spatial and temporal scales, understand emergent system behavior, and advance theories.…”
Section: Existing Ses Research and Remote Sensingmentioning
confidence: 99%