| Literature DB >> 31829213 |
Kidanemaryam Berhe1, Freweini Gebrearegay2, Hadush Gebremariam2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pregnant women and children are the most vulnerable groups to zinc deficiency. Despite the presence of few primary studies, studies that could provide strong evidence that would help policymakers to develop appropriate interventional strategies in addressing zinc deficiency among pregnant women and children are limited in Ethiopia. Therefore, the aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to estimate the national pooled prevalence and associated factors of zinc deficiency among pregnant women and children.Entities:
Keywords: Children; Ethiopia; Pregnant women; Zinc deficiency
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31829213 PMCID: PMC6907210 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-7979-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Flow diagram of the studies included in the systematic review and meta-analysis of zinc deficiency among pregnant women and children in Ethiopia, 2019
Prevalence of zinc deficiency among pregnant women, from individual studies, Ethiopia, 2019
| Name of author | Region | Study design | Sample size | Response rate | Cutoffs used (μg/dl) | Prevalence | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gebremedhin S et al 2011 | SNNP | Cross-sectional | 750 | 93.3% | Serum zinc < 56 in the 1st TM and < 50 during the 2nd or 3rd TM | 53% | 9 |
| Stoecke BJ et al 2009 | SNNP | Cross-sectional | 99 | 100% | Plasma Zinc< 50 | 76% | 7 |
| Afework K et al 2008 | Amhara | Cross-sectional | 375 | 100% | Serum zinc level <75 | 66.7% | 7 |
| Regassa K 2017 | Addis Ababa | Cross-sectional | 403 | 100 | Serum zinc level <75 | 39.5% | 7 |
| Kumera G K et al 2015 | Amhara | Cross-sectional | 377 | 96.5 % | Serum zinc level < 56 in the 1st TM and <50 during 2nd and 3rd TM | 57.4 % | 8 |
| Rosalind S et al 2008 | SNNP | Cross-sectional | 99 | 100% | Plasma zinc <50 | 74% | 7 |
| Mekonen A 2016 | Gambela | Cross-sectional | 268 | 100% | Serum zinc < 56 during the 1st TM and < 50 during the 2nd or 3rd TM | 55.3% | 8 |
TM trimester, SNNP south nation, nationalities, and peoples
Associated factors of zinc deficiency among pregnant women, from individual studies, Ethiopia, 2019
| Author (s) | Associated factors | AOR(95%CI) |
|---|---|---|
| Gebremedhin S et al. 2011 | No intake of animal source foods | 2.51 (1.7,3.72) |
| Age (≥35 years) | 2.18 (1.25,3.63) | |
| Illiterate mothers | 1.7 (1.09,2.6) | |
| Inadequate DDS | 2.57 (1.57,4.18) | |
| Food insecurity | 5.07 (3.67,6.99) | |
| Coffee intake | 1.41 (1.06,1.84) | |
| Regassa K 2017 | No intake of animal source foods | 2.11 (1.3,3.42) |
| Drinking coffee | 2.12 (1.39,3.42) | |
| Elevated C-reactive protein | 2.48 (1.45,4.24) | |
| Kumera G et al. 2015 | Living in a rural area | 1.92 (1.04,3.56) |
| Too close birth | 3.97 (1.3,12.13) | |
| No intakes of animal origin foods | 2.29 (.35,3.89) | |
| Inadequate DDS | 2.09 (1.24,3.51) | |
| No nutrition education | 1.78 (1.1,2.86) | |
| Low serum albumin | 2.55 (1.4,4.63) | |
| Presence of intestinal parasitic infection | 2.6 (1.49,4.54) | |
| Mekonen A 2016 | No nutrition education | 2.4 (1.01,5.74) |
| 3rd trimester | 3.76 (1.49,9.49) | |
| No intake of animal-sourced foods | 3.05 (1.3,7.07) | |
| Inadequate DDS | 3.59 (1.45,8.96) |
DDS diet diversity score, AOR adjusted odds ratio, CI confidence interval
Prevalence of zinc deficiency among children, from individual studies, Ethiopia, 2019
| Name of author | Region | Study design | Age of children | Sample size | Response rate | Cutoffs used (μg/dl) | Prevalence | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zaida H et al. 2014 | Amhara | Cross-sectional | 4–15 years | 764 | 80.9% | SerumZinc< 65 for children< 10 years and < 70 for children> 10 years | 12.5% | 8 |
| Bemnet A et al. 2012 | Amhara | Cross-sectional | 10–14 years | 100 | 100% | Serum zinc < 75 | 47% | 7 |
| Roba K et al. 2018 | Babile (Oromia), Enderta and Hintalowajirat (Tigray) | Cross-sectional | 6–23 months | 162 | 100% | Low serum zinc< 65 | 67.3% | 7 |
| Masresha T et al. 2019 | National level | Cross-sectional | 6–59 months | 1176 | 100% | Serum zinc< 65 | 28% | 8 |
| Adamu B et al. 2015 | Amhara | Cross sectional | 6–60 months | 240 | 100% | Serum zinc level < 65 | 57.1% | 8 |
| EPHI 2016 | National level | Cross sectional | 6–59 months | 1143 | 100% | Serum zinc level < 70 | 35% | 8 |
| 5–14 years | 1569 | 100% | Serum zinc level < 70 | 36% | 8 |
EPHI Ethiopia Public Health Institute
Fig. 2Forest plot for the pooled prevalence of zinc deficiency among pregnant women in Ethiopia, 2019
Fig. 3Forest plot for the pooled prevalence of zinc deficiency among children in Ethiopia, 2019
Fig. 4Subgroup analysis by age on the pooled prevalence of zinc deficiency among children in Ethiopia, 2019
Summary of meta-analysis for the associated factors of zinc deficiency among pregnant women in Ethiopia, 2019
| S.no | Associated factors | Number of studies | AOR (95%CI) | Heterogeneity | Egger’s test ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Q-value | I2 | |||||||
| 1 | Coffee intake | 2 | 1.76(1.05,2.92) | 0.026 | 3.99 | 0.046 | 74.9 | 0.98 |
| 2 | Low intake of animal source foods | 4 | 2.57(1.8,3.66) | <0.001 | 8.03 | 0.045 | 62.7 | 0.96 |
| 3 | Inadequate diet diversity | 3 | 2.12 (1.28,3.53) | 0.003 | 8.71 | 0.013 | 77 | 0.71 |
AOR adjusted odds ratio, CI confidence interval
Fig. 5Funnel plot for assessing publication bias among studies included to estimate the pooled prevalence of zinc deficiency among pregnant women in Ethiopia, 2019
Fig. 6Funnel plot for assessing publication bias among studies included to estimate the pooled prevalence of zinc deficiency among children in Ethiopia, 2019