© 2007 American Public Health Association DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2005.070409
Héctor Javier Sánchez-Pérez is with the Department of Population and Health, El Colegio de la Frontera Sur, Chiapas, México, and with Grups de Recerca dAmèrica i dÀfrica Llatines (GRAAL), Barcelona, Spain. Miguel A. Hernán is with the Department of Epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Mass. Adriana Ríos-González is with the Department of Population and Health, El Colegio de la Frontera Sur, Chiapas. Marcos Arana-Cedeño is with Instituto Nacional de la Nutrición y Ciencias Médicas, Salvador Zubirán Centro de Capacitación en Ecología y Salud para Campesinos-Defensoría Derechu a la Salud, and the General Foundation, San Cristóbal de Las Casas, Chiapas, México. Albert Navarro is with GRAAL and with Laboratori de Bioestadística i dEpidemiologia, Universidad Autònoma de Barcelona, España. Douglas Ford is with the University of Virginia School of Law/Legal Aid Justice Center, Charlottesville, Va. Mark A. Micek and Paula Brentlinger are with the Department of Health Services, School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle. Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Héctor Javier Sánchez-Pérez, PhD, El Colegio de la Frontera Sur, Carretera Panamericana y Periférico Sur, S/N, CP 29290, Barrio María Auxiliadora, San Cristóbal de Las Casas, Chiapas, México (e-mail: hsanchez{at}sclc.ecosur.mx).
We performed a cross-sectional, community-based survey, supplemented by interviews with community leaders in Chiapas, Mexico, to examine the prevalence and predictors of child malnutrition in regions affected by the Zapatista conflict. The prevalence rates of stunting, wasting, and underweight were 54.1%, 2.9%, and 20.3%, respectively, in 2666 children aged younger than 5 years. Stunting was associated with indigenous ethnicity, poverty, region of residence, and intracommunity division. The results indicate that malnutrition is a serious public health problem in the studied regions.
In Chiapas, Mexico, long-standing conflicts related to land tenure, religion, and other issues have been further complicated by an armed conflict between the Mexican government and the Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional ("the Zapatistas"), which began in 1994 over Zapatista demands that the Mexican government address the alarming poverty conditions among the indigenous population. Social polarization and intolerance have led to forced displacement of more than 16000 Chiapanecan citizens, politically motivated violence (including murder), and intracommunity divisions so complete as to have produced villages within which separate governments, clinics, schools, justice systems, and other services for adherents of the separate factions operate.2–5 We postulated that chronic interparty and intracommunity conflict in Chiapas might be associated with malnutrition, particularly stunting, in children. Because no published studies have addressed this question in this setting, we sought to describe the prevalence of malnutrition in children aged younger than 5 years in the 3 Chiapanecan regions most adversely affected by the Zapatista conflict and its association with various socioeconomic and conflict-related factors.
In the regions most adversely affected by the armed conflict in Chiapas,6 we conducted a cross-sectional, population-based household survey, supplemented by semistructured interviews with community-based governing councils and health teams. We investigated the health conditions of and access to care for children in the conflict zone, including rates of childhood malnutrition, pulmonary tuberculosis, and maternal mortality. The methodology of the study has been described previously.6 Weight was measured with baby and hanging scales.7 Height was measured with infantometers (for children aged younger than 2 years) and stadiometers (for children aged 2 to 4 years).7 Age was obtained by asking the parent for each childs birthdate, confirming whenever possible (65% of children) with birth records or vaccination cards. Anthropometric data were analyzed with the Epi Info 2000 Epinut package (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Ga), which classified children as stunted, wasted, or underweight; standardized z scores (obtained using Epi info) of less than 2.0 for these classifications were used as the cutoff point, and participants with impulsive results (those for whom the obtained measures of height and age gave an impossible nutritional status) were excluded.8 We estimated the association between stunting and other variables using logistic regression (consistent confidence intervals9 were used to adjust for clustering within communities), weighted to reflect probability of selection. Given the transversal design of the study, and the conditions of the region during the fieldwork that impacted the nonresponse rates, the estimated odds ratios were adequate to measure the magnitude of the association between the nutritional status and factors analyzed, but did not necessarily approximate the prevalence ratio, because of the high prevalence of stunting.
The final sample included 21 government-aligned communities, 6 opposition-aligned communities, and 19 communities divided by political-party affiliation (government vs Zapatista-aligned).6 Four of the government-aligned communities were internally divided by religious or intraparty differences. We identified 2838 children aged younger than 5 years from 1779 households (20 households declined to participate).
Table 1
The overall prevalence of stunting observed was substantially greater than that reported by the Mexican National Nutritional Survey (17.8% nationally; 29.2% in Chiapas State)10 and was consistent with observations from other surveys performed in Chiapas during the Zapatista conflict.11,12 In fact, the prevalence of stunting present in the children we examined resembled that in child residents of conflict zones in Afghanistan and Angola (63.7% and 57.3%, respectively)13,14 more than it did that in children in northern Mexico (7.1%). Such high levels of malnutrition place these children at higher risk for diminished school and work performance, as well as mortality.15–21 These effects may worsen disparities between the rural indigenous residents of Chiapas and others, thus predisposing them to continued cycles of violence and polarization. Furthermore, our findings may have underestimated the true prevalence of malnutrition, because we suspect that communities with higher levels of conflict and poverty were more likely to refuse participation in the study. A key finding of our study was the strong association between factors related to conflict—both the Zapatista conflict and other sources of intracommunity division—and poor nutritional status. Although causality could not be firmly established by our cross-sectional methods, intracommunity divisions and intercommunity conflict may decrease access to food and increase vulnerability to infectious diseases in several ways: violence and social tensions may disrupt traditional mechanisms of intracommunity cooperation, thus interfering with cultivation and marketing of crops; maternal stress may diminish breastmilk production22,23; and religious or political discrimination may impede access to health services. However, because the study sample was not representative of the entire population of the study regions, the generalizability of our observations is limited. Nevertheless, given the environment of conflict,6 our data are unique. If circumstances permit, further confirmatory studies should be conducted. Childhood malnutrition is a serious public health problem in the conflict-affected regions of Chiapas. Conflict-related divisions may serve to increase disparities between this and other Mexican populations. The observed levels of malnutrition compromise the health of Chiapanecan children.24,25
This investigation was funded by the El Colegio de la Frontera Sur, El Centro de Capacitación en Ecología y Salud para Campesinos-Defensoría del Derecho a la Salud, Universitat Autónoma de Barcelona, and the Grand Service Foundation. We are indebted to the leaders and residents of the studied communities and to participating health workers from both the governmental and the Zapatista health sectors, for their permission, participation, and trust. We gratefully acknowledge the collaboration and participation of Physicians for Human Rights in the project on which this study was based. We would also like to thank Guadalupe Vargas, Roberto Solís Hernández, Alejandro Flores Hernández, Herlinda Méndez Santiz, Juan Carlos Nájera, Julio César Arias, Blanca Coello (all at the Colegio de la Frontera Sur), Juan Manuel Canales, Jonathan Kirsch, Kerri Sherlock, and Dave McFarlane for their invaluable assistance with interviews and database management.
Human Participant Protection
Peer Reviewed
Contributors Accepted for publication November 22, 2005.
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