Abstract:
Deciduous Canine Tooth Bud Extraction (DCBE) is a harmful practice prevalent
among pastoral communities in Kenya. The communities blame the canine tooth for
‘causing’ diarrhoea, fevers and growth retardation in their babies. As a remedy,
DCBE is performed to ‘increase child survival’. The practice which involves forceful
extraction of teeth using un-sterile knives, bicycle wires, razor blades or bare hands,
predisposes the babies to serious complications and even death. Malnutrition is also
common among children in the pastoralist communities due to their nomadic way of
life. Women and children who depend mainly on livestock for milk, meat and blood
as their staple food, are left without food when the livestock move to other areas in
search of pasture. The situation results in poor infant feeding practices, predisposing
the child to common illnesses such as diarrhoea. The purpose of this study was to
determine the relationship between prevalence of Deciduous Canine Tooth Bud
Extraction (DCBE) and nutritional status of the children under five years in Kajiado
District. This was a descriptive cross-sectional study carried out among the Maasai
in Ngong and Magadi Divisions of Kajiado District, Rift Valley Province, Kenya
between April and October 2009. A total of 420 Maasai mothers each with a child
of under five year old living in manyattas (homesteads) were randomly selected
from five (5) sub locations in Ngong and Magadi Divisions of Kajiado District. The
study also included an average of 10 men, women and children from each sublocation
for focus group discussion, and a total of 10 key informants for in- depth
interview. Multistage and simple random sampling was used to select manyattas,
and mothers with their children respectively. The respondents were interviewed
xxi
using structured interview schedule guide. Child nutritional status was assessed
using standard anthropometric techniques. Data was analyzed using Statistical
Package for Social Science (SPSS) Version 14 software. Nutritional data was
thereafter transferred from Nutri-Survey, 2007(ENA, SMART) to SPSS and Excel
programme was used to generate figures. The findings showed the prevalence of
DCBE was 24.5%. Ngong Division had an average prevalence of 27.8% which was
higher prevalence compared to Magadi Dvision (21.3%). The prevalence was
significantly different (p ≤ 0.05) between the selected sub-locations in the study.
Respondents’ awareness and support for the practice was high. Although consumed
foods by the children were milk, porridge, ugali, tea with milk and sugar, chapati,
fats, and beans. There was limited consumption of meat, fruits, and vegetables; the
degree of chronic undernutrition with 15.0% classified as moderate stunting and
19.5% as severe stunting. The prevalence of Global Acute Malnutrition (GAM) was
20.7 %, Moderate Acute Malnutrition (MAM) was 13.3% and Severe Acute
Malnutrition (SAM) was 7.4%. Although there was no significant relations between
the practice of DCBE and nutritional status (p>0.05), the trend of undernutrition was
higher among those that had undergone DCBE than those that had not. There were
indications that children were targeted for DCBE due to their poor nutritional status.
On the other hand, the complications due to DCBE affect the child nutritional status.
These results therefore show that the practice of DCBE could be a nutritionally
related out come among the children in the Maasai community living in Kajiado.