ABSTRACT
Childhood malnutrition is the single biggest
contributor to under-five mortality, due to greater susceptibility to
infections and slow recovery from illness caused by nutritional inadequacy
which tends to hamper the development of the body and if it continued for long
periods of time could result in growth faltering manifested in the form of low
weight, small height and low IQ. This is cross sectional study designed to
assess the nutritional status of children, 0-5 years in Internally Displaced
Persons5 Camps, in Benin City, Nigeria. A structured questionnaire was used to
elicit personal information of the children, socio-economic data of their
mothers/care givers, feeding habit, breastfeeding practices, complementary
feeding practices and health status of the children. Anthropometric measurement
of weight-fbr-height, weight-fbr-age and height-for-age zscores. Data were
analyzed using descriptive statistics and Chi square. From the result, some
ofthem (29.1%) were within 36 months old. Thirty-six point four (36.4%) oftheir
mother were within the age 31-35 years, majority (90%) sourced their drinking
water from borehole and 85.4% used improve/covered pit toiled. Most (65.9%) ate
three times. Most (63.6%, 45.9%, 60% and 75.9%) sometimes go to bed without food,
starve due to lack of food, consumed spoilt/low quality food because that was
the only food in the house and reject food because he/she was given the same
type of food, respectively. About 20.5% ofthe women breastfed their babies
exclusively. Majority (86.7%) stopped breastfeeding their children immediately
after the introduction of complementary food. Some 32.7% and 21.8% of the
children experienced fever and diarrhea in the 2 weeks. Prevalence of wasting,
stunting and underweight was among 2.7%, 52.7% and 24.5% of the children.
Considering the number ofthose who were stunted, underweight and those who
suffered fever and diarrhea in this study, there is need for the government and
individuals to come to the aid ofthese internally displaced persons by providing
food and medical facilities for them.
GIFT, I (2024). Nutritional Status Of Children Within The Age Of 0-5 In IDP Camp, Edo State:- Okoro, Gift I.. Repository.mouau.edu.ng: Retrieved Nov 27, 2024, from https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/nutritional-status-of-children-within-the-age-of-0-5-in-idp-camp-edo-state-okoro-gift-i-7-2
IJEOMA, GIFT. "Nutritional Status Of Children Within The Age Of 0-5 In IDP Camp, Edo State:- Okoro, Gift I." Repository.mouau.edu.ng. Repository.mouau.edu.ng, 25 Mar. 2024, https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/nutritional-status-of-children-within-the-age-of-0-5-in-idp-camp-edo-state-okoro-gift-i-7-2. Accessed 27 Nov. 2024.
IJEOMA, GIFT. "Nutritional Status Of Children Within The Age Of 0-5 In IDP Camp, Edo State:- Okoro, Gift I.". Repository.mouau.edu.ng, Repository.mouau.edu.ng, 25 Mar. 2024. Web. 27 Nov. 2024. < https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/nutritional-status-of-children-within-the-age-of-0-5-in-idp-camp-edo-state-okoro-gift-i-7-2 >.
IJEOMA, GIFT. "Nutritional Status Of Children Within The Age Of 0-5 In IDP Camp, Edo State:- Okoro, Gift I." Repository.mouau.edu.ng (2024). Accessed 27 Nov. 2024. https://repository.mouau.edu.ng/work/view/nutritional-status-of-children-within-the-age-of-0-5-in-idp-camp-edo-state-okoro-gift-i-7-2