Relations (1)
related 0.50 — strongly supporting 5 facts
The relationship is established through research investigating the correlation between dietary diversity and the prevalence of anaemia in pregnancy, as noted in [1] and [2]. Studies indicate that while an initial association may exist, it is often mediated or rendered insignificant by sociodemographic factors or regional variables, as described in [3], [4], and [5].
Facts (5)
Sources
Dietary diversity insufficiently explains differences in prevalence of ... journals.plos.org 3 facts
claimThe association between dietary diversity and anaemia in pregnancy observed in the study was no longer evident when sociodemographic factors were controlled for.
claimIn the study 'Dietary diversity insufficiently explains differences in prevalence of anaemia in pregnancy across regions', the association between higher household wealth index and lower odds of anaemia was statistically significant in the unadjusted model but lost significance in the adjusted model, potentially due to residual confounding.
claimRegion does not differentiate the effect of dietary diversity on anaemia in pregnancy, but it may distort the association between them.
Dietary diversity insufficiently explains differences in prevalence of ... pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov 2 facts
claimThe study titled 'Dietary diversity insufficiently explains differences in prevalence of anaemia in pregnancy' determined the association between dietary diversity and the prevalence of anaemia in pregnancy.
claimThe study titled 'Dietary diversity insufficiently explains differences in prevalence of anaemia in pregnancy' concludes that dietary diversity is an insufficient explanation for the differences in the prevalence of anaemia in pregnancy.