| Literature DB >> 24899905 |
Pamela S Gaskin1, Anders L Nielsen1, Douladel Willie2, Tara C Durant3.
Abstract
Previous reviews of nutritional status in children under 5 years describe the Caribbean grouped with Latin America. This paper focuses specifically on the Caribbean and the goals and targets of the Millennium Declaration that have bearing on childhood development. The results indicate that CARICOM countries have made progress in terms of child health as assessed by gross health indicators. Yet, the millennium generation experiences coexistence of undernutrition and overweight in early childhood. The associations of GNI with markers such as poverty indices are somewhat inconsistent with traditional findings and highlight a need to reassess the causes of infant mortality and low birth weight. However, a lack of systematic local data has hampered progress on an individual country basis. Interventions that deal more pointedly with country specific needs are required including those targeting obesity if the MDGs are to be attained by all member states.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24899905 PMCID: PMC4034655 DOI: 10.1155/2014/580928
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Environ Public Health ISSN: 1687-9805
Early childhood health indicators ranked by gross national income.
| Country or region | GNI per capita (US$), 2007 | Percentage of infants with wasting, | Percentage of stunted infants, |
|---|---|---|---|
| Haiti | 560 | 10 | 29 |
| Guyana | 1300 | 8 | 17 |
| Jamaica | 3710 | 2 | 4 |
| Belize | 3800 | 2 | 22 |
| Suriname | 4730 | 5 | 11 |
| Trinidad and Tobago | 14100 | 4 | 4 |
| Developing countries | 2405 | 11 | 30 |
[4].
Figure 1Incidence of infant mortality (IM) in Caribbean countries in relation to their gross national income (GNI) [23].
Low birth weight among infants in CARICOM countries ranked by gross national income.
| Country or region | GNI per capita (US$), 2007 | Percentage of infants with |
|---|---|---|
| Haiti | 560 | 25 |
| Guyana | 1300 | 13 |
| Jamaica | 3710 | 12 |
| Belize | 3800 | 8 |
| Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | 4210 | 8 |
| Dominica | 4250 | 9 |
| Grenada | 4670 | 9 |
| Suriname | 4730 | 13 |
| Saint Lucia | 5530 | 11 |
| Saint Kitts and Nevis | 9630 | 9 |
| Antigua and Barbuda | 11520 | 5 |
| Barbados | 12356 | 14 |
| Trinidad and Tobago | 14100 | 19 |
| Bahamas | 15730 | 7 |
[4].
Figure 2Percentage of infants with low birth weight in CARICOM countries by antenatal care coverage [23].
Exclusive breastfeeding up to six months in CARICOM countries.
| Country or region | % of children (<6 months ) (2000–2007) |
|---|---|
| Bahamas | — |
| Barbados | — |
| Belize | 10 |
| Dominica | — |
| Haiti | 41 |
| Jamaica | 15 |
| Saint Kitts and Nevis | 56 |
| Saint Lucia | — |
| Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | — |
| Trinidad and Tobago | 13 |
[4].
Breastfeeding with supplemental feeding in CARICOM countries.
| Country or region | % of children (6–9 months) (2000–2007) | % of children (20–23 months) (2000–2007) |
|---|---|---|
| Bahamas | — | — |
| Barbados | — | — |
| Belize | — | 27 |
| Dominica | — | — |
| Haiti | 87 | 35 |
| Jamaica | 36 | 24 |
| Saint Kitts and Nevis | — | — |
| Saint Lucia | — | — |
| Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | — | — |
| Trinidad and Tobago | 43 | 22 |
[4].