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    Stem-cell research : nature.com subject feeds

    Maternal nutrition practices and its implications for child growth and development

    March 29, 2026
    All Feeds / Stem-cell research : nature.com subject feeds / Maternal nutrition practices and its implications for child growth and development
    March 29, 2026 Stem-cell research : nature.com subject feeds
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    Subjects

    • Breast cancer
    • Cancer epidemiology
    • Cancer genetics
    • Epidemiology
    • Genetics research
    • Lung cancer
    • Oral cancer
    • Stem-cell research
    • Clinical trial design

    Abstract

    Maternal nutrition is crucial for optimal child growth and development, reducing pregnancy complications like low birth weight and premature birth. Adequate nutrition during pregnancy and breastfeeding helps prevent nutrient deficiencies with long-lasting effects. However, poor maternal nutrition can lead to adverse child growth outcomes, such as intrauterine growth restriction and developmental issues. The main objective of this study was to investigate the factors influencing maternal nutrition practices and its implication for child growth and development in the communities of Jimma Town. A community-based cross-sectional study was conducted from April to June 2024 among 423 mothers. Face-to-face interviews were conducted by trained data collectors to gather detailed information on socio-demographic characteristics, maternal health, nutrition, and child growth and development. The multivariate analysis was conducted to control the confounding influence using variables that were eligible for multivariable logistic regression analysis and had a p-value of less than 0.25. In the multivariable logistic regression, factors with p < 0.05 were considered statistically significant predictors. This study of 423 mothers with a 100% response rate identified key factors affecting child growth. Education was significant, with adjusted odds ratios (AOR) of 4.02 for primary, 5.44 for secondary, and 2.95 for college education. Casual laborers had a lower AOR of 0.19, while marital status (AOR = 1.14) and income levels between 6,001 and 10,000 (AOR = 2.11) positively impacted outcomes. Important health indicators included no pregnancy support (AOR = 0.27), no antenatal care (AOR = 0.30), and a fetal heartbeat (AOR = 4.02). Nutritional practices such as not consuming calcium-rich foods (AOR = 0.43) and adequate breastfeeding (AOR = 6.10) were linked to better development. Children with a normal BMI (AOR = 2.62) and appropriate birth weight (AOR = 1.16) showed improved growth outcomes, all at a 5% significance level. The analysis reveals that being educated mothers, having husbands employed in NGOs or in private business, being married mothers, having a family monthly income (6001-10,000), having a normal BMI, having a breastfeeding frequency of 6–8 per day, having pregnancy support, increasing the number of meals during pregnancy and lactation, having a balanced diet, having antenatal visits, having tetanus toxoid, having nutritional counseling, and taking different supplements during pregnancy like folic acid, iron, calcium, omega-3, vitamins, and zinc can improve child growth and development. Interventions aimed at improving maternal education, economic support, and nutritional health are essential for enhancing child growth in the community.

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    Data availability

    The datasets used and or analyzed during the current study available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

    Abbreviations

    BMI:

    Body mass index

    MUAC:

    Mid-upper arm circumference

    DHA:

    Docosahexaenoic acid

    DDS:

    Dietary diversity score

    HAZ:

    Height-for-age z-score

    IRB:

    Institute of review board

    WHZ:

    weight-for-height

    WAZ:

    Weight-for-age z-score

    WFP:

    World food program

    WHO:

    World Health Organization

    WHZ:

    Weight-for-height z-score

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    Author information

    Authors and Affiliations

    1. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Faculty of Public Health, Jimma University, Jimma, Ethiopia

      Buzuneh Tasfa Marine

    2. Department of Human Nutrition, Faculty of Public Health, Jimma University, Jimma, Ethiopia

      Yematawork Alemu Haile

    3. Department of Statistics, College of Natural and Computational Science, Hawassa University, Hawassa, Ethiopia

      Mihiret Genene Zewde

    Authors
    1. Buzuneh Tasfa Marine
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    2. Yematawork Alemu Haile
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    3. Mihiret Genene Zewde
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    Contributions

    Buzuneh Tasfa Marine: made important contributions to the study by leading the conceptualization and design of the research, overseeing data collection, designing and performing the data analysis, writing of the article, and critically revising the article for significant intellectual content. Additionally, he was responsible for coordinating the final preparation and submission of the work. Yematawork Alemu Haile: contributed to data collection, the conceptualization of the article, the article draft, design of the analysis and the critical drafting for significant intellectual interaction. Mihiret Genene Zewde: contributed to data collection, the conceptualization of the article, participated in the design of the analysis, the thorough writing of the article, and the critical drafting for significant intellectual interaction. The final manuscript was read and approved by all authors.

    Corresponding author

    Correspondence to Buzuneh Tasfa Marine.

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    Competing interests

    The authors declare no competing interests.

    Ethical approval and consent to participate

    The study was approved by the institutional review board (IRB) of Jimma University. Formal support and ethical letters was obtained from Jimma University’s IRB. Informed consent was obtained from all participants and/or their legal guardian(s). The information gathered from the patient file was handled with confidence. The programming of data extraction tools avoids the display of names and other private information. The Declaration of Helsinki’s guiding principles were followed during the study’s execution.

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    Marine, B.T., Haile, Y.A. & Zewde, M.G. Maternal nutrition practices and its implications for child growth and development. Sci Rep (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-026-37151-4

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    • Received: 07 December 2024

    • Accepted: 20 January 2026

    • Published: 29 March 2026

    • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-026-37151-4

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    Keywords

    • Determinants
    • Maternal nutrition
    • Child growth
    • Child health
    • Anthropometry implication
    • Breastfeeding practices
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