| Literature DB >> 32071812 |
Emily DeLacey1,2,3, Cally Tann3,4,5,6, Nora Groce7, Maria Kett7, Michael Quiring2, Ethan Bergman8, Caryl Garcia2, Marko Kerac1,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There are an estimated 2.7 million children living within institutionalized care worldwide. This review aimed to evaluate currently available data on the nutrition status of children living within institutionalized care.Entities:
Keywords: Anthropometry; Children with disabilities; Malnutrition; Nutrition; Nutritional deficiency; Orphanage; Children; Institutionalized care; Low birth weight; Residential care
Year: 2020 PMID: 32071812 PMCID: PMC7007983 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.8484
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Description of studies included in review.
Description of studies included in the review of children living within institutionalized care.
| Author, year | Study design | Country | Number of institutions | Study population | Gender (percent female) | Disability |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Multi-Country | ||||||
| Longitudinal Cohort | Cambodia, Ethiopia, India, Kenya, Tanzania | 83 | n: 2,283, IBC: 993 (43.5%) and FBC: 1,290 (56.5%), median age 9 years at baseline, range 6–12 years and median age 12 years at year 3 follow-up, range 8–16 years | IBC: 43%, FBC: 47% | Unknown, Special needs homes excluded | |
| Cross Sectional | Cambodia, Ethiopia, India, Kenya, Tanzania | 83 | n: 2,837, IBC: 1,480, 6–12 years, mean age 9 years, FBC: 1,357 | IBC: 42.8%, FBC: 47.1% | Unknown, Special needs homes excluded | |
| Africa | ||||||
| Cross Sectional | Ethiopia | 1 | n: 81, 5–14 years, IBC mean age 9.5 years ± 2.8, FBC mean age 9.7 ± 2.6 | 25.9 % | Unknown | |
| Cross Sectional | Kenya | 19 | n: 2862, IBC: 1337, FBC: 1425, CLS: 100, 0–18 years, median age 11.1 years | 46% | Unknown, HIV included | |
| Cross Sectional | Kenya | 4 Schools (multiple orphanages attended) | n: 416, IBC: 208, CC:208, range 4–11 years, 50% 4–7 years and 50% 8–11 years | 50% | Excluded | |
| Cross Sectional | Malawi | 3 | n: 293, IBC: 76, mean age 6.44 ± 4.69, range 0-<15 years, FBC: 137, mean age 7.92 ± 2.62, CC: 80, mean age 6.1 ± 3.17 | Total: 45.4% , IBC: 44.7%, FBC: 44.5%, CC: 47.4% | Unknown, HIV included | |
| Asia | ||||||
| Cross Sectional | Malaysia | 5 | n: 85, 13–18 years | – | Excluded | |
| Cross Sectional | Bangladesh | 1 | n: 232, 6–18 years, mean age 13.38 years ± 3.69 | 44% | Excluded | |
| Cross Sectional | Kazakhstan | 10 | n: 308 children, 0- 3 years | – | Excluded | |
| Prospective Longitudinal | India | 1 | n: 85, mean age 9.2 years, range 4–14 | 40% | Unknown, HIV group home | |
| Cross Sectional | Kazakhstan | 6 | n: 103, ages 5–29 months, mean 14.89 months ± 6.85) | 49.5% | Excluded | |
| Cross Sectional | Hong Kong | 1 | n: 215, 11.9 years ± 5.2, range 1.9–27 | 47% | Included, 3 residential wards for children with disabilities | |
| Cross Sectional | Myanmar | 1 | n: 60, 2–15 years, >5: 26.7%, 5–10: 56.7%, 11–15: 16.6% | 53.3% | Unknown, HIV group home | |
| Cross Sectional | India | 70 | 3,822, 6–18 years | – | Unknown | |
| Cross Sectional | Bangladesh | 1 | n: 49, 6–15 years, mean age 8.72 years ± 1.38 | 61% | Included, 8.7% | |
| Eastern Europe | ||||||
| Cross Sectional | Moldova | – | n: 367 | – | Unknown | |
| Cross Sectional | Russia | 3 | n: 234, mean age 21 months ± 12.6, range 1.5 months to 6 years | 45% (gender not recorded for 12 children) | Included, 16% severe disabilities, 75% developmental disabilities but excluded from analyses | |
| Cross Sectional | Russia | 3 | n: 325 children, 0–5 years | – | Included, 8% of the intake sample (N: 383) but 21% of the children in residence (N:302) were considered to have a disability but excluded from analyses | |
| European Union | ||||||
| Cross Sectional | Romania | 6 | n:136, mean age 21 months ± 7.32; range 5 months- 2.7 years | 50% | Excluded | |
| Prospective Longitudinal | Portugal | 15 | n: 49, mean 7.14 months ± 6.17) range 0–21 months | 49% | Excluded | |
| Cross Sectional | Poland | 5 | n:153, range 7–20 years | 43.8% | Unknown | |
| Cross Sectional | Romania | 6 | n: 208, IBC: 123, CC: 66, 5 months–2.6 years, mean age 20.65 months ± 7.26 | IBC: 50.4% CC: 53% | Excluded | |
| Middle East | ||||||
| Cross Sectional | Lebanon | 2 | n: 153, 5–14 years, mean age 8.86 ± 2.45 years | 62.7% | Unknown | |
| South America | ||||||
| Cross Sectional | Brazil | 1 | n: 243, 1–15years | 30.3% | Included, HIV included | |
| The Caribbean | ||||||
| Cross Sectional | Jamaica | 3 | n: 226, IBC n: 113, 5–18 years, mean 10.66 ± 3.67 years, CC n: 103, mean 10.28 years ± 3.20 | IBC: 38.9%, CC: 58.3% | Unknown, HIV and other infectious diseases excluded | |
Notes.
Institution-based care
Family-based care (orphaned or abandoned children in community settings)
Community children (non-orphans)
Children living on the street
Anthropometric measurements and results.
Anthropometric data of children living within institutionalized care in various countries.
| Author, year | Growth reference | Weight for age (WAZ) | Weight for- length/ height (WHZ) | Length/ height for age (HAZ) | BMI- for-Age | Head circumference for age | Other | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Multi-Country | ||||||||
| WHO growth charts | – | – | IBC: Mean −1.0 ± 1.4, FBC: Mean −1.0 ± 1.3 | IBC: Mean −0.7 ± 1.0, FBC: Mean −0.7 ± 1.2 | – | – | This study does not support the hypothesis that IBC is systematically associated with poorer well-being than FBC for orphaned and abandoned children ages 6 to 12 in countries with high rates. Much greater variability among children within care settings was observed than among care-setting types. | |
| WHO growth charts | – | – | IBC: Mean −0.96 ± 1.46, FBC: Mean −1.03 ± 1.29, Weighted IBC vs. FBC: Mean (CI) 0.011 (−0.08, 0.10) | IBC: Mean −0.68 ± 0.97, FBC: Mean −0.73 ± 1.39, Weighted IBC vs. FBC: Mean (CI) 0.072 (−0.01, 0.16) | – | – | While it is possible that respondent bias accounts for better subjective health scores for IBC, the lack of significant differences on the biometric scores and the lower prevalence of recent illness suggest that the growth and overall health of IBC is no worse than that of FBC. There were no differences between children in IBC and FBC in mean height for age or BMI for age. | |
| Africa | ||||||||
| NCHS | IBC: >80%: 64% <80%: 36% | IBC: >80%: 97.3% | IBC: | – | – | – | The children in IBC were more likely to be short for their age indicating early and chronic malnutrition. Both groups of children had a high probability of weighing less than the standard for their age. | |
| WHO | ≤ 10 years, n: 2131 | ≤ 5 years, n: 380 | 0–18 years, n: 2842 | 10–18 years, n: 2374 | – | – | FBC were more than twice as likely as children in IBC to be stunted (AOR: 2.6, 95% CI [2.0–3.4]). CLS were nearly six times more likely to be stunted compared to children in IBC (AOR: 5.9, 95% CI [3.6–9.5]). | |
| IBC | IBC | IBC | – | – | – | The risk of stunting was 2.8 times higher and underweight was 0.043 times higher among IBC compared with CC. | ||
| NCHS | <5 years Mean | <5 years Mean | <5 years Mean | – | – | – | Younger than 5 years old, the mean | |
| Asia | ||||||||
| WHO Growth References | – | – | – | Severely thin 4.7% | – | – | – | |
| WHO Growth References, Essence of Pediatrics 2011 ranges for malnutrition | Total malnourished: 60.3%, Mild: 43.1%, Moderate: 16.8%, Severe: 0.4% | – | – | – | – | – | Children 15 to 18 years old were most malnourished. Higher malnutrition among the boys than girls in the age group of 15–18 years old but gender did not have a significant effect on severity. Malnutrition was higher during the first four years in the orphanage. With increasing duration in the orphanage, malnutrition levels gradually declined. | |
| n: 286, mean | n: 286, mean | n: 286, mean | – | – | – | 72% of the children had one or more growth, nutrition or developmental deficits, and 24% had three or more deficits. | ||
| NCHS, CDC, | 25th percentile: −3.73 | 25th percentile: −2.29 | 25th percentile: −3.06 | – | – | – | “Irrespective of the ART status, a decrease in underweight, stunting and wasting was seen at the end of 36 months. There was an observed higher rate of | |
| Mean: −1.34 ± 1.17, range −4.9 to 0.94 | Mean: −0.63 ± 1.41, range −4.44 to 2.84 | Mean: −1.62 ± 1.61, range −5.49 to 3.11 | – | n:102, mean: −1.70 ± 1.27, range −4.53 to 1.90 | – | “We found that all three of the growth parameters departed substantially from expected levels relative to those of healthy children.” | ||
| Not specified | Mean: −3.9 | – | – | – | – | Triceps Skin Fold Median: 58.6% | – | |
| WHO | – | – | Short Stature: 18.3% | Underweight: 26.7% | – | – | Nutritional problems seen in 60% of the children. | |
| NCHS | Girls mean wt range (kg): 16.5 ± 2- 46.8 ± 9.66 | – | Girls mean ht range (cm): 104 ± 6.30- 154.2 ± 5.64 | – | – | Girls mean arm circumference (cm): 15 ± 0.78–22.7 ± 3.59 | Growth was similar in all regions analyzed. Heights and weights were far below NCHS figures, suggesting a high degree of growth delay and stunting but were higher than urban slum or rural counterparts. The extent of delay, in terms of age, was up to 3 years. | |
| Nutrition survey of Rural Bangladesh 1996 | Mean: −0.39 ± 1.22 | Mean: 0.38 ± 1.36 | Mean: −0.76 ± 1.02 | Underweight: 10.87% | – | – | – | |
| Eastern Europe | ||||||||
| WHO (excluding head circumference which was compared to American standards) | Birth: −1.34 ± 0.08 | – | Birth: -.62 ± .14 | – | Birth: −1.55 ± 0.12 | – | 75% (84/112) of children’s records available indicated developmental delays. | |
| CDC, USA Vital Statistics, and standards for the Northwestern Region of the Russian Federation. | Mean: −1.68 (1.39) | Mean: −0.60 (1.20) | Mean: −1.56 (1.37) | – | Mean: −1.17 (1.33) | Chest Circumference | Disabilities: prenatal narcotic exposure, fetal alcohol syndrome, physical deformity, Down syndrome, cerebral palsy, hydrocephalus, microcephalus, heart disorder, other. | |
| European Union | ||||||||
| CDC 2000 | IBC: mean −1.23 ± 1.08, P ≤.001 | IBC: −0.67 ± 1.14, P ≤.001 | IBC: mean −0.84 ± 0.86, P ≤.001 | – | IBC: mean −1.10 ± 0.99, P ≤.001 | – | 24% of children living in IBC compared to 3% CC were low birth weight (p ≤.001). | |
| Persistently low (n: 10, 20.4%) | – | Persistently low (n: 18, 36.7%) | – | Persistently low (n: 11, 22.5%) | – | Being younger at institutional admission posed a significant risk factor for impaired physical development across the three domains. | ||
| University of Physical Education in Krakow (percentiles) | – | – | – | Thinness or Underweight: 14% boys and 5% girls | – | Thickness of the sum of three skin folds in normal ranges: boys 83% and girls 85% | Thickness of skinfolds was measured in ∼90% of the participants both genders (in relation to a wide range of standards, between 10 and 90 percentiles). Strong correlation between the thickness of skinfold and gender. The average thicknesses of various skinfolds were higher in girls than in boys. | |
| CDC | Mean | Mean | Mean | – | Mean | Size | Children living in IBC had poorer growth compared to CC. When birthweight was entered as a covariate, findings were similar, with the exception of weight for height, which was no longer significantly different. | |
| Middle East | ||||||||
| – | – | Stunting: | Normal: 90.8% | – | – | Increasing age (OR: 5.201, 95% CI [1.347–20.085]), irregular breakfast intake (OR: 6.852, 95% CI [1.462–32.12]), and increased screen time more than two hours per day (OR: 12.126, 95% CI [2.659–55.288]) were associated with significantly higher odds of being stunted. | ||
| South America | ||||||||
| NCHS, type classified according to the Seone-Lathan classification | – | – | – | – | – | – | 41% were malnourished, including both chronic and acute malnutrition cases. 49% of the girls and 40% of the boys had malnutrition. No significant difference between malnourished children and controls. | |
| The Caribbean | ||||||||
| WHO | IBC Girls | – | IBC Girls | – | – | Mean MUAC | Children living in institutional care were at higher risk for malnutrition. | |
Notes.
Institution-based Care
Family-based Care (orphaned or abandoned children in community settings)
Community Children (non-orphans)
Children living on the Street
World Health Organization
National Center for Health Statistics (USA)
Centers for Disease Control (USA)
Body Mass Index
height
weight
Mid-pper Arm Circumference
Diet, micronutrient status, clinical signs/ symptoms and infections results.
Diet, micronutrient status, clinical signs/ symptoms and infections of children living within institutionalized care in various countries.
| Author, year | Dietary analysis | Micronutrient status | Clinical signs/symptoms and infections |
|---|---|---|---|
| Multi-Country | |||
| – | – | By caregiver report, children living in institutions were also less likely to have had a cough, diarrhea or fever in the two weeks before the interview (19.9 vs. 41.2%, weighted difference 220.6%, 95% CI [224%,218%]) or to be sick on the day of the interview (5.9% vs. 12.2%,), weighted difference 26.1%, 95% CI [28%, 24%]). | |
| Africa | |||
| – | – | Edema: IBC (4%), FBC (0%) | |
| Using the Household Food Insecurity Access Scale (HFIAS), 42% of IBC and 2% of FBC reported being food secure. 95% of children in IBC reported an adequate diet compared to 93% of children in FBC and 99% of SLC, ( | – | HIV rates: IBC (2.1%), FBC (1.3%), SLC (1%) ( | |
| Using a 24hr diet recall and Nutri Survey program, diets were assessed. A total of 63 and 37 food items were consumed by the CC and IBC respectively. Only 7.2% of IBC consumed more than three food groups compared to 45.2% of CC. 92.9% of IBC and 54.8% of CC consumed less than four food groups ( | – | IBC | |
| – | – | Illness in past four weeks (%) | |
| Asia | |||
| – | The nutritional status, based on blood biomarkers, revealed that 37.1% of the children were anemic, 21.4% had low albumin, 38.1% had low vitamin D, 5.5% were iodine-deficient and 2% had low serum zinc. | – | |
| Dietary intake was compared with the Indian Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA). A 24-h dietary recall revealed that children <7 years received 75% of the RDA for energy, and older children received 93 to 107% of RDA for energy. All children received adequate (>100% RDA) amounts of both protein and fat. | Hemoglobin (Hb) level was measured using automated blood analyzer. Results indicated that anemia was a prominent manifestation of HIV. Although baseline prevalence of anemia was only 40%, during the study period the cumulative incidence rose to 85%. | 75% had infections in the initial period (of <3 months) of admission into the facility. | |
| – | Venous blood samples were used for assessment of hemoglobin status. Anemia status was not found to be predictive of development status. | – | |
| – | – | Children with disabilities in long-term care at increased risk for H. pylori infection. 61% were seropositive for H. Pylori. 55.4% of 157 pediatric patients (<16yrs) were seropositive compared with 50 control group children ( | |
| – | – | Ocular manifestations: 5.1% | |
| Dietary intake was compared with the Indian Council of Medical Research’s (1984) recommended dietary allowance (RDA). 1,150 children were selected for dietary analysis. Energy intakes fell short compared to the RDA for most children and the deficit was higher in older children when compared to younger children. | Most common nutritional deficiencies encountered: vitamin A (2–8.5%), vitamin B complex and anemia. | Pallor indicating anemia: 2–17% | |
| Food intake was obtained by 24 h food-weighing method for seven days. The average food intake were calculated by using the Institute of Nutrition and Food Science. Total food intake was about double the intake of similar children in the 1995–96 nutrition survey. Mean energy (2,270 kcal), protein (65 grams), carbohydrate (335 grams) and fat intake (73 grams). Carbohydrates, protein and fat provide 59%, 12% and 29% of total calories respectively. Protein intake was 65 grams, about 50% higher than the requirement and the 1995–96 nutrition survey of the urban location of the same group. Energy intake was found 20% higher than requirement and about 42% higher compared to 1995–96 nutrition survey. | Mean intake calcium 826 mg, iron 31 mg, vitamin A 6,462 IU, carotene 10,508 µg, vitamin B1 1.60 mg, vitamin B2 1.64 mg, niacin 19 mg, vitamin C 111 mg and zinc 10.2 mg. | – | |
| Eastern Europe | |||
| – | 90% of children had anemia and one-fourth had severe anemia. | 76% of children had parasites and 10% were infected with three or more. | |
| European Union | |||
| Diets were chemically analyzed using the Kjeldahl method and Soxhlet method and compared to Polish Estimated Average Requirements. Results indicate that daily diets meet about 80% of recommended intake of energy, fat and carbohydrates. The intake of protein with daily diets exceeded EAR value and ranged from 115 to 362% (average 214.2%). It has been also found that the intake of basic nutrients was varied, coefficient variation (CV) ranged from 22.2% to 27.1%. | – | – | |
| Middle East | |||
| Compared to the Dietary Guidelines for American Children and Adolescents 2015 and based on a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire, more than half were estimated to have inadequate daily intake of vegetables, fruit, and proteins compared to the recommendation. | – | Abnormal Hair Condition: 5.9% ( | |
| South America | |||
| – | Anemia: 3% | “High rates of infectious diseases in all the children.” | |
| The Caribbean | |||
| Children living in both residential settings listed (1) carbohydrates and starches, (2) meat and (3) fruits and vegetables as the most commonly consumed food items. Significant difference in self-reports of foods consumed most often by CC and IBC (X2 (4, | – | – | |
Notes.
Institution-based care
Family-based care (orphaned or abandoned children in community settings)
Community children (non-orphans)
Children living on the street