Health Policy and Planning, Vol 13, 408-416, Copyright © 1998 by Oxford University Press
A Kusumayati and R Gross
The quality of poverty alleviation programmes relies heavily on appropriate
targeting and priority setting. Major problems in assessing poverty include
identification of the indicators of poverty and the methods used for its
assessment. Nutritional status, expressed by anthropometric indices, has
been proposed as a poverty indicator because of its validity, objectivity,
reliability and feasibility. This study was conducted to explore the
application of remote sensing to poverty mapping based on nutritional
status at the community level. Relationships between the nutritional status
within a community and the ecological characteristics of the community were
investigated. Multiple linear regression tests were executed, and the
resultant equations were tested for their validity in predicting
communities with poor nutritional status.Among geographical and ecological
indicators used, distance to the nearest market, main soil type, rice field
area, and perennial cultivation area were found to be most useful
predictors for the ranking of the communities by nutritional status. Among
non-ecological determinants, food consumption, health service status and
living conditions were also found as predictors. The highest correlation
was found if total population was also taken into account in the regression
model (R2
ARTICLES
Research report. Ecological and geographic characteristics predict nutritional status of communities: rapid assessment for poor villages
Faculty of Public Health, University of Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia; SEAMEO-TROPMED Regional Center for Community Nutrition, University of Indonesia, Jakarta, Indonesia; Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) GmbH, Eschborn, Germany
0.69; p<0.0001). In the assessment
of the sensitivity and specificity of the eight models studied,
'undernutrition' was defined as a condition where a community belongs in
the first quartile for nutritional status (highest prevalence of
undernutrition), and the baseline nutritional survey was considered as a
standard method for final diagnosis.Most models which included only
ecological factors in the equations had lower sensitivity and specificity
than models which included all determinant factors in the equations. All
models which took into account the total population had higher sensitivity
and specificity than those that did not take total population into account.
The best model of those that took into account only the geographical and
ecological characteristics of the community's living environment had
similar sensitivity and specificity (80% and 94.1%, respectively) as the
models that considered non-geographical and non-ecological variables in
addition to geographical and ecological variables. In the case of West
Sumatra, only four ecological and geographic characteristics were
sufficient to predict poverty in villages. Since these characteristics
could be surveyed by remote sensing, it may well be possible to use remote
sensing for a rapid method for poverty mapping.
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