Household food security and nutritional status of tobacco and non-tobacco growers in marginal areas of Embu district
Abstract
This study examined the difference in household food security and nutrition
status of tobacco and non-tobacco growers in marginal areas of Embu district.
The survey was conducted on a random sample of 146 households of
tobacco growers with 176 preschoolers and 15-1 households of non-tobacco
growers with 174 preschool children.
Data were collected using structured questionnaires, focus group discussions
and anthropometric measurement were also taken.
The study revealed that there was no significant difference in amount of
calories produced per year between the two groups.
Tobacco farmers had significantly more food available for household use.
This was because, unlike non-tobacco farmers, tobacco farmers do not sell most
of the harvest.
There was no difference in the proportion of household income spent on
food although tobacco farmers had significantly higher income.
The prevalence of stunting and underweight was higher in non-tobacco
growing households, but there was no significant difference in levels of wasting.
The factors which seem to influence nutritional status differ by cropping
system. For tobacco growers the factors were, household income, amount of
calories available for household use, age of the child and household size. For non
tobacco growers the factors were, age of the child, mother's age, household size,
the
number of days the mother is involved in sale of labour, total land cultivated,
and total calories available for household use.
It was concluded that tobacco growing is compatible with household food
security and nutrition in marginal areas.
Citation
Master of Science Degree in Applied Human Nutrition,Publisher
University of Nairobi Department of Food and Nutrition Technology