Publication | Open Access
Child wasting and concurrent stunting in low- and middle-income countries
35
Citations
55
References
2020
Year
Unknown Venue
MalnutritionConcurrent WastingDevelopment EconomicsNutrition DevelopmentPublic Health NutritionEducationCross-sectional SurveysPovertyPopulation NutritionPublic HealthDevelopmental EpidemiologyPopulationPopulation ChildrenChild Well-beingEarly Childhood DevelopmentChild DevelopmentChild HealthGlobal HealthChild WastingPediatricsChild NutritionDemographyChild Protection
Summary Sustainable Development Goal 2.2, to end malnutrition by 2030, includes elimination of child wasting, defined as weight-for-length more than 2 standard deviations below international standards. Prevailing methods to measure wasting rely on cross-sectional surveys that cannot measure onset, recovery, and persistence — key features that inform preventive interventions and disease burden estimates. We analyzed 21 longitudinal cohorts to show wasting is a highly dynamic process of onset and recovery, with incidence peaking between birth and 3 months. By age 24 months 29.2% of children had experienced at least one wasting episode, more than 5-fold higher than point prevalence (5.6%), demonstrating that wasting affects far more children than can be inferred through cross-sectional surveys. Children wasted before 6 months had faster recovery and shorter episodes than children wasted at older ages, but early wasting increased the risk of later growth faltering, including concurrent wasting and stunting (low height-for-age), increasing their risk of mortality. In diverse populations with high seasonal rainfall, population average weight-for-length varied substantially (>0.5 z in some cohorts), with the lowest mean Z-scores during the rainiest months, creating potential for seasonally targeted interventions. Our results elevate the importance of establishing interventions to prevent wasting from birth to age 6 months, likely through improved maternal nutrition, to complement current programs that focus on children ages 6-59 months.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1