Do parental Smoking Behaviors Affect Children's Thinness, Stunting, and Overweight Status in Indonesia? Evidence from a Large-Scale Longitudinal Survey

被引:0
|
作者
Adrianna Bella
Teguh Dartanto
Dimitri Swasthika Nurshadrina
Gita Kusnadi
Faizal Rahmanto Moeis
Renny Nurhasana
Aryana Satrya
Hasbullah Thabrany
机构
[1] Center for Indonesia’s Strategic Development Initiatives,Centre for Health Economics
[2] Monash Business School,Department of Economics, Faculty of Economics and Business
[3] Universitas Indonesia,Institute for Economic and Social Research, Faculty of Economics and Business
[4] Universitas Indonesia,Center for Social Security Studies, School of Strategic and Global Studies
[5] Universitas Indonesia,Urban Studies Program, School of Strategic and Global Studies
[6] Universitas Indonesia,Department of Management, Faculty of Economics and Business
[7] Universitas Indonesia,undefined
[8] National Commission for Tobacco Control,undefined
来源
关键词
Parental smoking; Child malnutrition; Thinness; Stunting; Obesity; Indonesia; I12;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The anticipated financial and health impacts of smoking exposure on children's malnutrition status have been a global concern. Albeit the emerging double burden of malnutrition along with the remarkably high prevalence of smokers in Indonesia, only a few studies have examined the impacts of parental smoking on children’s nutritional status. Using a balanced panel data of the Indonesia Family Life Survey, we analyze the extent of paternal smoking effects on the likelihood of stunting, thinness, and overweight in children. We employ a Probit Random Effect Model with Mundlak correction to eliminate the endogeneity issue of paternal smoking and estimate the impact of paternal smoking (smoking status and smoking intensity) on child malnutrition. The finding shows that a child whose father has moderate or high smoking intensity tends to have a higher probability of thinness and stunting by 2.93 and 3.47 percentage points, respectively. In contrast, the impact of a father's smoking intensity on a child's overweight status is not significant. This study also observes the nonsignificant effect of the father's smoking status on all child malnutrition status. Overall, exposure to paternal smoking increases children's risk of stunting and thinness. Key policies in tobacco control should be encouraged to reduce the potential long-term effects of paternal smoking on the country's future human capital and economic growth.
引用
收藏
页码:714 / 726
页数:12
相关论文
共 30 条
  • [1] Do parental Smoking Behaviors Affect Children's Thinness, Stunting, and Overweight Status in Indonesia? Evidence from a Large-Scale Longitudinal Survey
    Bella, Adrianna
    Dartanto, Teguh
    Nurshadrina, Dimitri Swasthika
    Kusnadi, Gita
    Moeis, Faizal Rahmanto
    Nurhasana, Renny
    Satrya, Aryana
    Thabrany, Hasbullah
    [J]. JOURNAL OF FAMILY AND ECONOMIC ISSUES, 2023, 44 (03) : 714 - 726
  • [2] Natural disasters, mitigation and household welfare in Indonesia: Evidence from a large-scale longitudinal survey
    Dartanto, Teguh
    [J]. COGENT ECONOMICS & FINANCE, 2022, 10 (01):
  • [4] Do the disadvantaged benefit more from small classes? Evidence from a large-scale survey in Japan
    Hojo, Masakazu
    Senoh, Wataru
    [J]. JAPAN AND THE WORLD ECONOMY, 2019, 52
  • [5] How do parents influence student creativity? Evidence from a large-scale survey in China
    Tang, Chaoying
    Duan, Qihong
    Long, Haiying
    [J]. THINKING SKILLS AND CREATIVITY, 2022, 46
  • [6] Parental health and children's cognitive and noncognitive development: New evidence from the longitudinal survey of Australian children
    Huong Thu Le
    Ha Trong Nguyen
    [J]. HEALTH ECONOMICS, 2017, 26 (12) : 1767 - 1788
  • [7] Parent smoking behavior and children's future development: evidence from Indonesia Family Life Survey (IFLS)
    Dartanto, Teguh
    Moeis, Faizal
    Nurhasana, Renny
    Satrya, Aryana
    Thabrany, Hasbullah
    [J]. TOBACCO INDUCED DISEASES, 2018, 16 : 37 - 37
  • [8] Do Parental Absence and Children's Gender Affect Early Childhood Investment? Evidence from Rural Thailand
    Dinh, Ngoc Tu T.
    Kilenthong, Weerachart T.
    [J]. SINGAPORE ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2021, 66 (05): : 1443 - 1468
  • [9] Choice of contraceptive methods by women's status: Evidence from large-scale microdata in Nepal
    Yamamoto, Yuki
    Matsumoto, Ken'ichi
    [J]. SEXUAL & REPRODUCTIVE HEALTHCARE, 2017, 14 : 48 - 54
  • [10] Mother's education and nutritional status as correlates of child stunting, wasting, underweight, and overweight in Nigeria: Evidence from 2018 Demographic and Health Survey
    Lawal, Saheed Akinmayowa
    Okunlola, David Aduragbemi
    Adegboye, Oyelola A.
    Adedeji, Isaac A.
    [J]. NUTRITION AND HEALTH, 2023,