| Literature DB >> 25924925 |
Chisa Shinsugi1,2, Masaki Matsumura3,4, Mohamed Karama5,6, Junichi Tanaka7,8, Mwatasa Changoma9, Satoshi Kaneko10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic malnutrition or stunting among children under 5 years old is affected by several household environmental factors, such as food insecurity, disease burden, and poverty. However, not all children experience stunting even in food insecure conditions. To seek a solution at the local level for preventing stunting, a cross-sectional study was conducted in southeastern Kenya, an area with a high level of food insecurity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25924925 PMCID: PMC4428099 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-1802-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Distributions of length/height-for-age from birth to 59 months: (A): Boys, (B): Girls. The 5 lines represent median (solid green line) and standard deviations (SD) from the median length/height-for-age provided by the World Health Organization Child Growth Standards: +/−3 SD (dotted gray line), +/−2 SD (dashed orange line) between median and +/−3 SD lines. Black circles: children without stunting in the severe food insecure group; black +: children with stunting in the severe food insecure group; red triangle: children without stunting in the non-severe food insecure group; red x: children with stunting in the non-severe food insecure group.
Distribution of stunting status by characteristics of children (N = 404)
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| 0-5 | 3 | (7.5%) | 37 | (92.5%) | 40 | |
| 6-11 | 6 | (15.8%) | 32 | (84.2%) | 38 | |
| 12-23 | 21 | (23.1%) | 70 | (76.9%) | 91 | |
| 24-35 | 21 | (29.2%) | 51 | (70.8%) | 72 | |
| 36-47 | 24 | (32.0%) | 51 | (68.0%) | 75 | |
| 48-59 | 19 | (21.6%) | 69 | (78.4%) | 88 | |
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| Boy | 40 | (21.5%) | 146 | (78.5%) | 186 | |
| Girl | 54 | (24.8%) | 164 | (75.2%) | 218 | |
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| 18 and younger | 5 | (38.5%) | 8 | (61.5%) | 13 | |
| 19-30 | 51 | (22.1%) | 180 | (77.9%) | 231 | |
| 31-40 | 29 | (21.5%) | 106 | (78.5%) | 135 | |
| Above 40 | 8 | (34.8%) | 15 | (65.2%) | 23 | |
| Missing | 1 | (50.0%) | 1 | (50.0%) | 2 | |
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| Underweight | 28 | (28.6%) | 70 | (71.4%) | 98 | |
| Normal | 56 | (21.0%) | 211 | (79.0%) | 267 | |
| Overweight | 7 | (30.4%) | 16 | (69.6%) | 23 | |
| Obese | 3 | (25.0%) | 9 | (75.0%) | 12 | |
| Missing | 0 | (0.0%) | 4 | (100.0%) | 4 | |
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| Not educated | 49 | (26.2%) | 138 | (73.8%) | 187 | |
| Preschool | 0 | (0.0%) | 9 | (100.0%) | 9 | |
| Primary | 44 | (22.8%) | 149 | (77.2%) | 193 | |
| Secondary | 1 | (6.7%) | 14 | (93.3%) | 15 | |
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| 0 or 1 | 28 | (17.8%) | 129 | (82.2%) | 157 | |
| 2 or more | 66 | (26.8%) | 180 | (73.2%) | 246 | |
| Missing | 0 | (0.0%) | 1 | (100.0%) | 1 | |
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| Secure | 15 | (20.0%) | 60 | (80.0%) | 75 | |
| Mildly insecure | 6 | (18.8%) | 26 | (81.3%) | 32 | |
| Moderately insecure | 7 | (17.9%) | 32 | (82.1%) | 39 | |
| Severely insecure | 66 | (25.6%) | 192 | (74.4%) | 258 | |
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| Poorest | 31 | (28.4%) | 78 | (71.6%) | 109 | |
| Second | 19 | (20.7%) | 73 | (79.3%) | 92 | |
| Third | 29 | (28.7%) | 72 | (71.3%) | 101 | |
| Fourth | 15 | (15.0%) | 85 | (85.0%) | 100 | |
| Missing | 0 | (0.0%) | 2 | (100.0%) | 2 | |
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| No | 61 | (22.2%) | 214 | (77.8%) | 275 | |
| Yes | 32 | (25.0%) | 96 | (75.0%) | 128 | |
| Missing | 1 | (100.0%) | 0 | (0.0%) | 1 | |
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| No | 59 | (20.4%) | 230 | (79.6%) | 289 | |
| Yes | 34 | (29.8%) | 80 | (70.2%) | 114 | |
| Missing | 1 | (100.0%) | 0 | (0.0%) | 1 | |
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| No | 69 | (21.9%) | 246 | (78.1%) | 315 | |
| Yes | 24 | (27.3%) | 64 | (72.7%) | 88 | |
| Missing | 1 | (100.0%) | 0 | (0.0%) | 1 | |
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| No | 11 | (20.0%) | 44 | (80.0%) | 55 | |
| Yes | 83 | (23.8%) | 266 | (76.2%) | 349 | |
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| No | 51 | (21.3%) | 189 | (78.8%) | 240 | |
| Yes | 42 | (25.8%) | 121 | (74.2%) | 163 | |
| Missing | 1 | (100.0%) | 0 | (0.0%) | 1 | |
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| No | 58 | (20.4%) | 227 | (79.6%) | 285 | |
| Yes | 35 | (29.7%) | 83 | (70.3%) | 118 | |
| Missing | 1 | (100.0%) | 0 | (0.0%) | 1 | |
*HFIAS, Household Food Insecurity Access Scale.
Odds ratios (ORs) for child stunting among the whole child group using univariate and multiple logistic regressions
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| 0-5 | Ref. | Ref. | |||
| 6-11 | 2.31 | (0.51 - 10.42) | 1.85 | (0.52 - 10.89) | |
| 12-23 | 3.70 | (1.02 - 13.45) | 2.48 | (0.92 - 13.95) | |
| 24-35 | 5.08 | (1.46 - 17.69) | 3.58 | (1.33 - 20.10) | |
| 36-47 | 5.80 | (1.71 - 19.75) | 3.43 | (1.40 - 18.98) | |
| 48-59 | 3.40 | (0.96 - 12.02) | 2.13 | (0.72 - 12.10) | |
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| Boys | Ref. | Ref. | |||
| Girls | 1.20 | (0.75 - 1.92) | 1.52 | (0.92 - 2.52) | |
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| 18 and younger | 2.21 | (0.62 - 7.84) | |||
| 19-30 | Ref. | ||||
| 31-40 | 0.97 | (0.56 - 1.67) | |||
| Above 40 | 1.88 | (0.78 - 4.53) | |||
| Missing | - | ||||
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| Underweight | Ref. | ||||
| Normal | 0.66 | (0.40 - 1.11) | |||
| Overweight | 1.09 | (0.41 - 2.94) | |||
| Obese | 0.83 | (0.16 - 4.26) | |||
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| Not educated | Ref. | ||||
| Preschool | - | ||||
| Primary | 0.83 | (0.51 - 1.35) | |||
| Secondary | 0.20 | (0.02 - 1.64) | |||
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| 0 or 1 | Ref. | Ref. | |||
| 2 or more | 1.69 | (1.01 - 2.83) | 1.59 | (0.93 - 2.73) | |
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| Secure | Ref. | Ref. | |||
| Mildly insecure | 0.92 | (0.29 - 2.95) | 1.02 | (0.30 - 3.47) | |
| Moderately insecure | 0.88 | (0.32 - 2.38) | 0.94 | (0.32 - 2.77) | |
| Severely insecure | 1.38 | (0.70 - 2.69) | 1.17 | (0.56 - 2.43) | |
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| Poorest | Ref. | Ref. | |||
| Second | 0.65 | (0.34 - 1.26) | 0.59 | (0.29 - 1.17) | |
| Third | 0.80 | (0.42 - 1.50) | 0.68 | (0.33 - 1.41) | |
| Fourth | 0.41 | (0.20 - 0.82) | 0.34 | (0.16 - 0.72) | |
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| No | Ref. | ||||
| Yes | 1.17 | (0.71 - 1.93) | |||
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| No | Ref. | Ref. | |||
| Yes | 1.66 | (0.99 - 2.77) | 1.48 | (0.83 - 2.64) | |
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| No | Ref. | ||||
| Yes | 1.34 | (0.80 - 2.25) | |||
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| No | Ref. | ||||
| Yes | 1.25 | (0.66 - 2.37) | |||
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| No | Ref. | ||||
| Yes | 1.29 | (0.79 - 2.08) | |||
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| No | Ref. | Ref. | |||
| Yes | 1.65 | (1.03 - 2.64) | 1.69 | (0.98 - 2.93) | |
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| No | Ref. | Ref. | |||
| Yes | 1.82 | (1.06 - 3.11) | 1.62 | (0.87 - 3.01) | |
Note: 393 among 404 children with non-missing variables were used for the multivariate logistic regression analysis. For multivariate logistic regression, all variables listed in Table 1 were used and selected by backward stepwise selectin with 0.2 of significant level of removal from the model. All the selected variables were used for calculating adjusted odds ratios (adjusted ORs).
*HFIAS, Household Food Insecurity Access Scale
Adjusted odd ratios for child stunting among separate child groups by household food insecurity level using multiple logistic regression
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| No | Ref. | No | Ref. | ||
| Yes | 3.22 | (1.43 - 7.25) | Yes | 3.24 | (1.04 - 10.07) |
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| No | Ref. | Not educated/Preschool | Ref. | ||
| Yes | 0.50 | (0.22 - 1.16) | Primary/Secondary | 0.44 | (0.16 - 1.26) |
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| No | Ref. | Poorest | Ref. | ||
| Yes | 1.84 | (0.88 - 3.84) | Second | 0.14 | (0.03 - 0.73) |
| Third | 0.22 | (0.04 - 1.08) | |||
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| Fourth | 0.13 | (0.03 - 0.55) | ||
| 0-5 | Ref. | ||||
| 6-11 | 2.38 | (0.48 - 11.92) |
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| 12-23 | 1.89 | (0.47 - 7.62) | 0 or 1 | Ref. | |
| 24-35 | 4.04 | (1.01 - 16.14) | 2 or more | 2.81 | (0.92 - 8.58) |
| 36-47 | 3.16 | (0.85 - 11.79) | |||
| 48-59 | 1.59 | (0.36 - 6.94) | |||
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| Poorest | Ref. | ||||
| Second | 0.71 | (0.33 - 1.53) | |||
| Third | 0.80 | (0.35 - 1.85) | |||
| Fourth | 0.33 | (0.13 - 0.85) | |||
Note:
OR, Odds Ratio; 95% CI, 95% Confidence Interval; HFIAS, Household Food Insecurity Access Scale.
For multivariate logistic regression, all variables listed in Table 1 were used and selected by backward stepwise selection with 0.2 of significant level of removal from the model. All the selected variables were used for calculating adjusted odds ratios (adjusted ORs).
For non-severe-food insecure group, 33 children aged less than 12 months were removed from the analysis because only 1 stunting condition was found in these categories.