Public Health Nutrition
Volume 6, Issue 6, 2003, Pages 535-547

Impact of the health and living conditions of migrant and non-migrant Senegalese adolescent girls on their nutritional status and growth (Article) (Open Access)

Garnier D.* , Simondon K.B. , Hoarau T. , Benefice E.
  • a UR24 'Epidemiologie et Prevention', Inst. de Rech. pour le Developpement, BP 64501, 34394 Montpellier Cedex 5, France
  • b UR24 'Epidemiologie et Prevention', Inst. de Rech. pour le Developpement, BP 64501, 34394 Montpellier Cedex 5, France
  • c Laboratoire de Nutrition, Inst. de Rech. pour le Developpement, BP 1386, Dakar, Senegal
  • d UR24 'Epidemiologie et Prevention', Inst. de Rech. pour le Developpement, BP 64501, 34394 Montpellier Cedex 5, France

Abstract

Objective: To describe the living conditions of Senegalese adolescent girls according to their migration status, and to define the main socio-economic and biological determinants of their nutritional and growth status. Design: Health and living conditions, sexual maturation, and nutritional and growth status of adolescent girls were determined within the framework of a longitudinal study on growth. Settings: The capital city of Senegal (Dakar) and a rural community (Niakhar), 120 km south-east of Dakar. Subjects: Three hundred and thirty-one girls, 14.5-16.6 years of age, were recruited from the same villages. Thirty-six per cent of the sample remained in the villages to attend school and/or to help with household subsistence tasks (non-migrants). The remaining (64%) migrated to cities to work as maids (migrants) and lived in two different socio-economic environments: at the home of a guardian during the night and in the house of the employer during the daytime. Results: Family rural environment and guardian and employer urban environments were socio-economically different (P < 0.001). Living conditions in urban areas were better than in rural areas and the employer's environment was socio-economically more favourable. Migrants had more advanced sexual maturation and higher body mass index (BMI), fat mass index (FMI) and mid-upper arm circumference than non-migrants. However, migrants were smaller than non-migrants. BMI, FMI and weight-for-age were related to socio-economic levels and duration of migration. Schooling was positively related to height and negatively related to BMI. Conclusions: Migrants enjoyed better living conditions than non-migrants. This could be partly due to the better socio-economic environment of the employer. It was associated with earlier puberty and better nutritional status, but not with a better growth.

Author Keywords

Schooling Senegal Rural-urban migration Malnutrition Socio-economic environment Body mass index Nutrition transition Child labour Stunting Living conditions

Index Keywords

education body composition immigrant human priority journal health status rural health Urban Health Senegal Humans Adolescent urban rural difference female Socioeconomic Factors growth socioeconomics Article Sexual Maturation Adolescent Nutrition Physiology major clinical study growth curve anthropometry Transients and Migrants body mass body height nutritional status

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0141682819&doi=10.1079%2fPHN2003463&partnerID=40&md5=9a99f4b1fc60239f70af0cb6ed39c163

DOI: 10.1079/PHN2003463
ISSN: 13689800
Cited by: 15
Original Language: English