16 research outputs found
Mental Wellbeing and Self-reported Symptoms of Reproductive Tract Infections among Girls: Findings from a Cross-sectional Study in an Indian Slum
This study examined the self-reported mental wellbeing among slum-dwelling adolescents in Western India and asked whether adolescent postmenarcheal girlsâ mental wellbeing and self-reported symptoms suggestive of reproductive tract infections (RTIs) were associated. A sub-section of a cross-sectional personal interview survey among unmarried 10â18-year-old adolescents (n= 85) in a slum in the city of Nashik was analyzed. Logistic regression models were used to assess the associations between sociodemographic variables, physical health indicators, and adolescent postmenarcheal girlsâ mental wellbeing. Nearly every other postmenarcheal girl reported having experienced symptoms suggestive of RTIs during the last twelve months. Adolescent postmenarcheal girlsâ mental health and some aspects of somatic health appear to be closely interrelated. Understanding the relationship between adolescent mental wellbeing and reproductive health in low-income countries requires further investigation. Health service development in growing informal urban agglomerations in India and beyond should provide combined mental and reproductive health services for adolescents.
 
Like Mother(-in-Law) Like Daughter? Influence of the Older Generationâs Fertility Behaviours on Womenâs Desired Family Size in Bihar, India
This paper investigates the associations between preferred family size of women in rural Bihar, India and the fertility behaviours of their mother and mother-in-law. Scheduled interviews of 440 pairs of married women aged 16â34Â years and their mothers-in-law were conducted in 2011. Preferred family size is first measured by Coombs scale, allowing us to capture latent desired number of children and then categorized into three categories (low, medium and high). Womenâs preferred family size is estimated using ordered logistic regression. We find that the family size preferences are not associated with motherâs fertility but with motherâs education. Mother-in-lawâs desired number of grandchildren is positively associated with womenâs preferred family size. However, when the woman has higher education than her mother-in-law, her preferred family size gets smaller, suggesting that education provides women with greater autonomy in their decision-making on childbearing
Civilizing tastes: From caste to class in South Indian foodways
Anthropological explorations of food in South Asia are often framed by theories of
caste and ritual purity or pollution, with the highest castes characterised as protecting
their purity by accepting food from no-one of lower caste status, and those at the bottom
accepting food from anyone. The problem with this focus on caste is not that it is
misguided per se; many Hindus do indeed regulate their consumption in relation to such
concerns, and a quotidian understanding of caste remains vital in understanding how
people in India relate to one another. Rather, the problem is that our focus on caste as
the defining social institution of India has obscured social relationships defined by other
cross-cutting hierarchies that also, and increasingly, reflect and shape Indian foodways.
Drawing on prolonged ethnographic fieldwork in Andhra Pradesh, South India, this
chapter is concerned with how class in particular â both in terms of economic status and as a marker of distinction â also has profound implications for what people in South
India eat, with whom, and why; particularly in the wake of the economic liberalisation
that began in the 1990s and the emergence of new foods and tastes ripe for symbolic
appropriation
Age at menarche and diet among adolescents in slums of Nashik, India
Abstract
Background and aim: The role of dietary patterns in determining age at menarche is insufficiently understood in low-income countries. The relationship between dietary patterns, particularly the consumption of oil, and age at menarche in a slum-dwelling adolescent population in India is examined.
Methods: Data were derived from a cross-sectional baseline survey and anthropometric measurements among 10- to 19-year-old adolescents (n=545, female respondents 272, of whom 160 were post-menarcheal) and a household survey in two slums in the city of Nashik, Western India. By using mixed effects linear regression models, the association between age at menarche and household-wise use of sources of animal protein and oil and fat is examined.
Results: Age at menarche (mean 13.7 years) in the slums studied was relatively high according to Indian standards. Age at menarche and the consumption of dairy products, meat, fish and eggs were not associated. The household per capita consumption of vegetable oil had an inverse association with a girlâs age at menarche, and there was an indication of a positive association between use of ghee (clarified butter) and age at menarche. These associations did not disappear when controlling for anthropometric status and socio-economic characteristics.
Conclusion: Intake of fats and foods that are important sources of protein among underprivileged households in India is low and reflected in the relatively late age at menarche. The potential differences in the association between various types of fatty acids, energy intake and age at menarche in conditions of undernutrition requires further prospective study
Caught in-between: social developments and young men in urban India
The lives of young middle-class men in India are greatly different to their parents and older generations. As India economically liberalizes, there is a generational gap that has developed. Young men begin to start bridging this gap by living their lives through various negotiations and performances of appropriate masculinities in the contexts that surround them. Social developments in India mean that processes of consumption, urbanization and new practices of romantic and sexual expression have to be managed alongside older gendered expectations and responsibilities on young men. Through an ethnographic approach, this paper explores the social and cultural realities of young Indian men to understand how they are caught in-between and creatively manage their lives and relationships
EPICENTRES OF MISSING DAUGHTERS
The spatial spread of the female child deficit in India has been explored in terms of hot spots (with high deficits) and cold spots (with more female-favourable child sex ratios). It has been argued, using the Census of India data from individual censuses, that there is a contagion effect for both hot spots and cold spots. This paper takes this discussion forward by asking whether such an effect can be seen across censuses. To do so, it develops the concept of an epicentre to see whether a hot or cold spot in one census spreads shock waves across a wider region in later censuses. The longitudinal analysis of child sex ratios over three censusesâ1991, 2001 and 2011âshows that the hot spots are epicentres for the spread of female child deficits, while the cold spots display a reverse effect