| dc.description.abstract | Abstract: This cross-sectional survey was to determine dietary diversity, 
nutrient intake, nutrition status and prevalence of childhood illnesses 
among pre-school children in Matungu division, Western Kenya. A total of 
144 households were arrived at using multistage sampling, structured 
questionnaires with food frequency tables and 24-hour recalls were 
administered and anthropometric measurements taken. Linear regression tested 
statistical associations between variables. Epi Info was used to compute 
nutrition indices later assessed relative to National Centre for Health Statistics 
and World Health Organization. Only 3% of pre-school children had consumed 
highly diversified diets and consumption. Stunting was the most prevalent form 
of malnutrition and malaria was the most prevalent childhood infection. 
About 7%, 3.6% and 8.1% of changes in underweight, stunting and wasting, 
respectively, could be attributed to changes in dietary diversity. An r2
 of 0.284 
was obtained between nutrition status and morbidity. To enhance children’s 
nutrition and health status, efforts should be on strategies that increase dietary 
diversity. | en_US |