Multilevel analysis of prevalence and determinants of diarrhea among under-five children in Somalia: insights from the Somalia demographic and health survey 2020

Abstract Background Diarrheal diseases remain a critical public health challenge, particularly for children under five in low- and middle-income countries such as Somalia. This study aimed to assess the prevalence and determinants of diarrhea in this vulnerable population, utilizing data from the 20...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hamse Arab Ali, Abdulkadir Mohamed Nuh, Hamse Adam Abdi, Abdisalam Hassan Muse
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-01-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-21435-x
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832585361357799424
author Hamse Arab Ali
Abdulkadir Mohamed Nuh
Hamse Adam Abdi
Abdisalam Hassan Muse
author_facet Hamse Arab Ali
Abdulkadir Mohamed Nuh
Hamse Adam Abdi
Abdisalam Hassan Muse
author_sort Hamse Arab Ali
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Diarrheal diseases remain a critical public health challenge, particularly for children under five in low- and middle-income countries such as Somalia. This study aimed to assess the prevalence and determinants of diarrhea in this vulnerable population, utilizing data from the 2020 Somalia Demographic and Health Survey. Methods This investigation employed secondary data from the 2020 Somalia Demographic and Health Survey. The analysis involved the extraction and cleaning of variables using STATA version 17. The primary outcome variable was childhood diarrhea, analyzed alongside 19 explanatory variables encompassing sociodemographic and environmental factors. Descriptive statistics, chi-square tests, and multilevel logistic regression models were employed to elucidate associations. Results The study identified a diarrhea prevalence of 5.24%. Notably, sociodemographic factors significantly influenced this prevalence. Families within the second wealth category exhibited reduced odds of diarrhea (AOR = 0.699; 95% CI: 0.522–0.936), with those in the middle wealth category experiencing even lower odds (AOR = 0.524; CI: 0.391–0.702). Vitamin A supplementation was found to be critical; children lacking recent supplementation had increased odds of diarrhea (AOR = 1.790; CI: 1.440–2.225). Furthermore, feeding practices indicated that children not using bottle nipples faced higher odds of diarrhea (AOR = 1.377; CI: 1.172–1.617). Maternal age also played a significant role, with mothers aged 45–49 presenting higher odds of their children experiencing diarrhea (AOR = 7.650; CI: 1.762–33.184). Institutional births were associated with lower odds of diarrhea (AOR = 0.693; CI: 0.568–0.847), while children of educated fathers exhibited increased odds (AOR = 1.414; CI: 1.090–1.833). Additionally, lack of deworming medication significantly heightened the odds of diarrhea (AOR = 4.450; CI: 3.619–5.482). Conclusion The prevalence of diarrhea among children under five relatively high in Somalia. Key determinants include vitamin A supplementation, feeding with bottle, household wealth, age of mothers, place of delivery, paternal education, and deworming medication. Public health interventions should focus on enhancing household economic status, and ensuring regular deworming. Increasing the coverage and frequency of vitamin A supplementation could enhance children’s immune systems and reduce diarrhea incidence. Moreover, targeted economic support, health care programs for older mothers are essential to mitigate the adverse effects of socioeconomic factors on child health, ultimately leading to a substantial reduction in diarrheal diseases among young children.
format Article
id doaj-art-781590f75d9d48f79867d98c16f65e93
institution Kabale University
issn 1471-2458
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher BMC
record_format Article
series BMC Public Health
spelling doaj-art-781590f75d9d48f79867d98c16f65e932025-01-26T12:55:33ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582025-01-0125111410.1186/s12889-025-21435-xMultilevel analysis of prevalence and determinants of diarrhea among under-five children in Somalia: insights from the Somalia demographic and health survey 2020Hamse Arab Ali0Abdulkadir Mohamed Nuh1Hamse Adam Abdi2Abdisalam Hassan Muse3Faculty of Science and Humanities, School of Postgraduate Studies and Research (SPGSR), Amoud University Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, Addis-ababa Medical University CollegeCollege of Applied and Natural Science, University of HargeisaFaculty of Science and Humanities, School of Postgraduate Studies and Research (SPGSR), Amoud UniversityAbstract Background Diarrheal diseases remain a critical public health challenge, particularly for children under five in low- and middle-income countries such as Somalia. This study aimed to assess the prevalence and determinants of diarrhea in this vulnerable population, utilizing data from the 2020 Somalia Demographic and Health Survey. Methods This investigation employed secondary data from the 2020 Somalia Demographic and Health Survey. The analysis involved the extraction and cleaning of variables using STATA version 17. The primary outcome variable was childhood diarrhea, analyzed alongside 19 explanatory variables encompassing sociodemographic and environmental factors. Descriptive statistics, chi-square tests, and multilevel logistic regression models were employed to elucidate associations. Results The study identified a diarrhea prevalence of 5.24%. Notably, sociodemographic factors significantly influenced this prevalence. Families within the second wealth category exhibited reduced odds of diarrhea (AOR = 0.699; 95% CI: 0.522–0.936), with those in the middle wealth category experiencing even lower odds (AOR = 0.524; CI: 0.391–0.702). Vitamin A supplementation was found to be critical; children lacking recent supplementation had increased odds of diarrhea (AOR = 1.790; CI: 1.440–2.225). Furthermore, feeding practices indicated that children not using bottle nipples faced higher odds of diarrhea (AOR = 1.377; CI: 1.172–1.617). Maternal age also played a significant role, with mothers aged 45–49 presenting higher odds of their children experiencing diarrhea (AOR = 7.650; CI: 1.762–33.184). Institutional births were associated with lower odds of diarrhea (AOR = 0.693; CI: 0.568–0.847), while children of educated fathers exhibited increased odds (AOR = 1.414; CI: 1.090–1.833). Additionally, lack of deworming medication significantly heightened the odds of diarrhea (AOR = 4.450; CI: 3.619–5.482). Conclusion The prevalence of diarrhea among children under five relatively high in Somalia. Key determinants include vitamin A supplementation, feeding with bottle, household wealth, age of mothers, place of delivery, paternal education, and deworming medication. Public health interventions should focus on enhancing household economic status, and ensuring regular deworming. Increasing the coverage and frequency of vitamin A supplementation could enhance children’s immune systems and reduce diarrhea incidence. Moreover, targeted economic support, health care programs for older mothers are essential to mitigate the adverse effects of socioeconomic factors on child health, ultimately leading to a substantial reduction in diarrheal diseases among young children.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-21435-xDiarrheaUnder-five childrenMultilevel AnalysisSomaliaDeterminants of Diarrhea
spellingShingle Hamse Arab Ali
Abdulkadir Mohamed Nuh
Hamse Adam Abdi
Abdisalam Hassan Muse
Multilevel analysis of prevalence and determinants of diarrhea among under-five children in Somalia: insights from the Somalia demographic and health survey 2020
BMC Public Health
Diarrhea
Under-five children
Multilevel Analysis
Somalia
Determinants of Diarrhea
title Multilevel analysis of prevalence and determinants of diarrhea among under-five children in Somalia: insights from the Somalia demographic and health survey 2020
title_full Multilevel analysis of prevalence and determinants of diarrhea among under-five children in Somalia: insights from the Somalia demographic and health survey 2020
title_fullStr Multilevel analysis of prevalence and determinants of diarrhea among under-five children in Somalia: insights from the Somalia demographic and health survey 2020
title_full_unstemmed Multilevel analysis of prevalence and determinants of diarrhea among under-five children in Somalia: insights from the Somalia demographic and health survey 2020
title_short Multilevel analysis of prevalence and determinants of diarrhea among under-five children in Somalia: insights from the Somalia demographic and health survey 2020
title_sort multilevel analysis of prevalence and determinants of diarrhea among under five children in somalia insights from the somalia demographic and health survey 2020
topic Diarrhea
Under-five children
Multilevel Analysis
Somalia
Determinants of Diarrhea
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-21435-x
work_keys_str_mv AT hamsearabali multilevelanalysisofprevalenceanddeterminantsofdiarrheaamongunderfivechildreninsomaliainsightsfromthesomaliademographicandhealthsurvey2020
AT abdulkadirmohamednuh multilevelanalysisofprevalenceanddeterminantsofdiarrheaamongunderfivechildreninsomaliainsightsfromthesomaliademographicandhealthsurvey2020
AT hamseadamabdi multilevelanalysisofprevalenceanddeterminantsofdiarrheaamongunderfivechildreninsomaliainsightsfromthesomaliademographicandhealthsurvey2020
AT abdisalamhassanmuse multilevelanalysisofprevalenceanddeterminantsofdiarrheaamongunderfivechildreninsomaliainsightsfromthesomaliademographicandhealthsurvey2020