1. Causes and consequences of child growth faltering in low-resource settings.
- Author
-
Mertens A, Benjamin-Chung J, Colford JM Jr, Coyle J, van der Laan MJ, Hubbard AE, Rosete S, Malenica I, Hejazi N, Sofrygin O, Cai W, Li H, Nguyen A, Pokpongkiat NN, Djajadi S, Seth A, Jung E, Chung EO, Jilek W, Subramoney V, Hafen R, Häggström J, Norman T, Brown KH, Christian P, and Arnold BF
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Pregnancy, Cohort Studies, Dietary Supplements, Longitudinal Studies, Mothers, Sex Factors, Malnutrition economics, Malnutrition epidemiology, Malnutrition etiology, Malnutrition prevention & control, Anthropometry, Cachexia economics, Cachexia epidemiology, Cachexia etiology, Cachexia prevention & control, Developing Countries economics, Developing Countries statistics & numerical data, Growth Disorders epidemiology, Growth Disorders prevention & control
- Abstract
Growth faltering in children (low length for age or low weight for length) during the first 1,000 days of life (from conception to 2 years of age) influences short-term and long-term health and survival
1,2 . Interventions such as nutritional supplementation during pregnancy and the postnatal period could help prevent growth faltering, but programmatic action has been insufficient to eliminate the high burden of stunting and wasting in low- and middle-income countries. Identification of age windows and population subgroups on which to focus will benefit future preventive efforts. Here we use a population intervention effects analysis of 33 longitudinal cohorts (83,671 children, 662,763 measurements) and 30 separate exposures to show that improving maternal anthropometry and child condition at birth accounted for population increases in length-for-age z-scores of up to 0.40 and weight-for-length z-scores of up to 0.15 by 24 months of age. Boys had consistently higher risk of all forms of growth faltering than girls. Early postnatal growth faltering predisposed children to subsequent and persistent growth faltering. Children with multiple growth deficits exhibited higher mortality rates from birth to 2 years of age than children without growth deficits (hazard ratios 1.9 to 8.7). The importance of prenatal causes and severe consequences for children who experienced early growth faltering support a focus on pre-conception and pregnancy as a key opportunity for new preventive interventions., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF