Anthropometric deficits and the associated risk of death by age and sex in children aged 6–59 months: A meta-analysis

Archive ouverte

Thurstans, Susan | Wrottesley, Stephanie Victoria | Fenn, Bridget | Khara, Tanya N. | Bahwere, Paluku | Berkley, James A. | Black, Robert E. | Boyd, Erin M. | Garenne, Michel L. | Isanaka, Sheila | Lelijveld, Natasha | Mcdonald, Christine M. | Mertens, Andrew N. | Mwangome, M. K. | O'Brien, Kieran S. | Stobaugh, Heather C. | Taneja, Sunita | West, Keith P. | Guerrero, Saúl | Kerac, Marko | Briend, André | Myatt, Mark A.

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley -

International audience. Risk of death from undernutrition is thought to be higher in younger than in older children, but evidence is mixed. Research also demonstrates sex differences whereby boys have a higher prevalence of undernutrition than girls. This analysis described mortality risk associated with anthropometric deficits (wasting, underweight and stunting) in children 6–59 months by age and sex. We categorised children into younger (6–23 months) and older (24–59 months) age groups. Age and sex variations in near-term (within 6 months) mortality risk, associated with individual anthropometric deficits were assessed in a secondary analysis of multi-country cohort data. A random effects meta-analysis was performed. Data from seven low-or-middle-income-countries collected between 1977 and 2013 were analysed. One thousand twenty deaths were recorded for children with anthropometric deficits. Pooled meta-analysis estimates showed no differences by age in absolute mortality risk for wasting (RR 1.08, p = 0.826 for MUAC < 125 mm; RR 1.35, p = 0.272 for WHZ < −2). For underweight and stunting, absolute risk of death was higher in younger (RR 2.57, p < 0.001) compared with older children (RR 2.83, p < 0.001). For all deficits, there were no differences in mortality risk for girls compared with boys. There were no differences in the risk of mortality between younger and older wasted children, supporting continued inclusion of all children under-five in wasting treatment programmes. The risk of mortality associated with underweight and stunting was higher among younger children, suggesting that prevention programmes might be justified in focusing on younger children where resources are limited. There were no sex differences by age in mortality risk for all deficits.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Prognostic value of different anthropometric indices over different measurement intervals to predict mortality in 6-59-month-old children

Archive ouverte | Briend, André | CCSD

International audience. Objective: To compare the prognostic value of mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC), weight-for-height Z-score (WHZ) and weight-for-age Z-score (WAZ) for predicting death over periods of 1, 3 an...

Anthropometric criteria for best-identifying children at high risk of mortality: a pooled analysis of twelve cohorts

Archive ouverte | Khara, Tanya N. | CCSD

International audience. Objective: To understand which anthropometric diagnostic criteria best discriminate higher from lower risk of death in children and explore programme implications. Design: A multiple cohort i...

Re-thinking "non-response" to wasting treatment: Exploratory analysis from 14 studies

Archive ouverte | Cazes, Cecile | CCSD

International audience. Children who receive therapeutic feeding for wasting treatment but do not reach the anthropometric definitions of recovery (usually within 12-16 weeks) are categorised as 'non-responders' and...

Chargement des enrichissements...