Publication | Open Access
Association between parental socio-demographic factors and declined linear growth of young children in Jakarta
19
Citations
12
References
2018
Year
Young Adult DevelopmentNutrition DevelopmentLinear GrowthEducationAnthropometric IndicatorPhysical HealthGrowth PatternHuman DevelopmentPublic HealthDevelopmental EpidemiologyPopulation ChildrenDemographic ChangeEarly Childhood DevelopmentParental Socio-demographic FactorsAdolescent DevelopmentDemographic ProcessChild DevelopmentPhysical DevelopmentChild HealthGlobal HealthSociologyPediatricsChild NutritionYoung ChildrenDemographyDeclined Linear Growth
Background: In Indonesia, approximately 35.5% of children under five years old were stunted. Stunting is related to shorter adult stature, poor cognition and educational performance, low adult wages, lost productivity, and higher risk of nutrition-related chronic disease. The aim of this study was to identify parental socio-demographic risk factors of declined linear growth in children younger than 2 years old.Methods: This was a cohort-prospective study between August 2012 and May 2014 at three primary community health care centers (Puskesmas) in Jakarta, Indonesia, namely Puskesmas Jatinegara, Mampang, and Tebet. Subjects were healthy children under 2 years old, in which their weight and height were measured serially (at 6–11 weeks old and 18–24 months old). The length-for-age based on those data was used to determine stature status. The serial measurement was done to detect growth pattern. Parental socio-demographic data were obtained from questionnairesResults: From the total of 160 subjects, 14 (8.7%) showed declined growth pattern from normal to stunted and 10 (6.2%) to severely stunted. As many as 134 (83.8%) subjects showed consistent normal growth pattern. Only 2 (1.2%) showed improvement in the linear growth. Maternal education duration less than 9 years (RR=2.60, 95% CI=1.23–5.46; p=0.02) showed statistically significant association with declined linear growth in children.Conclusion: Mother with education duration less than 9 years was the determining socio-demographic risk factor that contributed to the declined linear growth in children less than 2 years of age.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1