| Literature DB >> 23748475 |
Claudia Beiersmann1, Justo Bermejo Lorenzo, Mamadou Bountogo, Justin Tiendrébeogo, Sabine Gabrysch, Maurice Yé, Albrecht Jahn, Olaf Müller.
Abstract
Childhood malnutrition remains a major challenge to public health in poor countries. Data on malnutrition determinants in African children are scarce. A cross-sectional survey was performed in eight villages of Burkina Faso in June 2009, including 460 children aged 6-31 months. Demographic, socioeconomic, parasitological, clinical and anthropometric characteristics were collected. The main outcome variable was weight-for-length (WFL) z-score (i.e. wasting). A multiple regression model identified village, age group, religion and the presence of younger siblings as significantly associated with wasting. Villages differed in their mean WFL z-score by up to one unit. Compared with younger children, the mean WFL z-score of children aged 24-35 months was 0.63 units higher than the WFL z-score in younger children. This study confirms the still unacceptable high level of malnutrition in young children of rural West Africa and supports the fact that childhood malnutrition is a complex phenomenon highly influenced by contextual variables.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; children; cross-sectional survey; determinants; malnutrition
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23748475 DOI: 10.1093/tropej/fmt037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Trop Pediatr ISSN: 0142-6338 Impact factor: 1.165