Child wasting and concurrent stunting in low- and middle-income countries

Mertens, Andrew and Benjamin-Chung, Jade and Colford, John M. and Hubbard, Alan E. and van der Laan, Mark J. and Coyle, Jeremy and Sofrygin, Oleg and Cai, Wilson and Jilek, Wendy and Rosete, Sonali and Nguyen, Anna and Pokpongkiat, Nolan N. and Djajadi, Stephanie and Seth, Anmol and Jung, Esther and Chung, Esther O. and Malenica, Ivana and Hejazi, Nima and Li, Haodong and Hafen, Ryan and Subramoney, Vishak and Häggström, Jonas and Norman, Thea and Christian, Parul and Brown, Kenneth H. and Arnold, Benjamin F. and Ahmed, Tahmeed and Ali, Asad and Begín, France and Bessong, Pascal Obong and Bhutta, Zulfiqar A. and Black, Robert E. and Bodhidatta, Ladaporn and Checkley, William and Crabtree, Jean E. and Das, Rina and Das, Subhasish and Duggan, Christopher P. and Faruque, Abu Syed Golam and Fawzi, Wafaie W. and da Silva Filho, José Quirino and Gilman, Robert H. and Guerrant, Richard L. and Haque, Rashidul and Houpt, Eric R. and Iqbal, Najeeha Talat and John, Jacob and John, Sushil Matthew and Kang, Gagandeep and Kosek, Margaret and Lima, Aldo Ângelo Moreira and Mahopo, Tjale Cloupas and Manandhar, Dharma S. and Manji, Karim P. and Mduma, Estomih and Mohan, Venkata Raghava and Moore, Sophie E. and Nyathi, Mzwakhe Emanuel and Olortegui, Maribel Paredes and Petri, William A. and Premkumar, Prasanna Samuel and Prentice, Andrew M. and Rahman, Najeeb and Sadiq, Kamran and Sarkar, Rajiv and Saville, Naomi M. and Shrestha, Bhim P. and Shrestha, Sanjaya Kumar and Sonko, Bakary and Svensen, Erling and Syed, Sana and Umrani, Fayaz and Ward, Honorine D. and Yori, Pablo Penataro (2023) Child wasting and concurrent stunting in low- and middle-income countries. Nature, 621 (7979). pp. 558-567. ISSN 0028-0836

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Abstract

Sustainable Development Goal 2.2—to end malnutrition by 2030—includes the elimination of child wasting, defined as a weight-for-length z-score that is more than two standard deviations below the median of the World Health Organization standards for child growth1. Prevailing methods to measure wasting rely on cross-sectional surveys that cannot measure onset, recovery and persistence—key features that inform preventive interventions and estimates of disease burden. Here we analyse 21 longitudinal cohorts and show that wasting is a highly dynamic process of onset and recovery, with incidence peaking between birth and 3 months. Many more children experience an episode of wasting at some point during their first 24 months than prevalent cases at a single point in time suggest. For example, at the age of 24 months, 5.6% of children were wasted, but by the same age (24 months), 29.2% of children had experienced at least one wasting episode and 10.0% had experienced two or more episodes. Children who were wasted before the age of 6 months had a faster recovery and shorter episodes than did children who were wasted at older ages; however, early wasting increased the risk of later growth faltering, including concurrent wasting and stunting (low length-for-age z-score), and thus increased the risk of mortality. In diverse populations with high seasonal rainfall, the population average weight-for-length z-score varied substantially (more than 0.5 z in some cohorts), with the lowest mean z-scores occurring during the rainiest months; this indicates that seasonally targeted interventions could be considered. Our results show the importance of establishing interventions to prevent wasting from birth to the age of 6 months, probably through improved maternal nutrition, to complement current programmes that focus on children aged 6–59 months.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Eprint Open STM Press > Multidisciplinary
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email admin@eprint.openstmpress.com
Date Deposited: 14 Nov 2023 07:12
Last Modified: 14 Nov 2023 07:12
URI: http://library.go4manusub.com/id/eprint/1688

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