Mother's Early Age of Marriage Predicts Children Malaria Risk in the Peruvian Amazon

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Date

2013

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Abstract

Objectives:

The objective of this study is to determine the malaria risk among children and adolescents from early married families in the Peruvian Amazon. We will explore the hypotheses that younger maternal age of marriage, younger maternal age at child birth and family member's involvement in labor migration are associated with increased malaria risk among their children under 18 years old.

Methods:

This research used data from a longitudinal study of human migration and family health implemented between February 2009 and August 2013 in 18 road and riverine communities of the Peruvian Amazon in the region of Loreto. 852 mother-child dyads were recruited, with five follow-up visits for the road communities and two follow-ups for the river communities. The primary outcome was number of child malaria episodes and the key independent variables were maternal age of marriage, maternal age at child birth and family member's labor activities. We used a multilevel Poisson model to examine relationships among these key variables, with standard errors to account for clustering of mothers in the households in communities.

Results:

50.1% of the mothers were married before the age of 18; 50.2% of the children lived with family members involved in labor migration. The multilevel Poisson model yielded an incidence rate ratio (IRR) of 2.19 for children whose mothers were married before 18 years old (95% CI: 1.68-2.93), compared to mothers who were married at 21 years and older, and an IRR of 2.13 for children whose mothers gave birth before 18 (95% CI: 1.52-2.99). The incidence rate of child malaria episodes was 6.99 times higher for children whose mother and other family members were both involved in labor migration than for those who were not (95% CI: 5.03-10.79).

Conclusion:

The results provide new insights of potential risk factors of child malaria and support the hypotheses that mother's early marriage timing, younger age at child birth and family member's involvement in labor migration correlate positively to increased malaria risk among children and adolescents in the Peruvian Amazon.

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Liu, Sheng (2013). Mother's Early Age of Marriage Predicts Children Malaria Risk in the Peruvian Amazon. Master's thesis, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/7321.

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