| Literature DB >> 32484872 |
Emelda A Okiro1,2, Noel K Joseph1, Caroline W Gitonga1, Robert W Snow1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Anaemia has long been recognised as a major public health problem among young children in lower- and middle-income countries and is an indicator of both poor nutrition and health status. There has been little progress towards improvement of anaemia in part due to its complex aetiology. An added impediment to the progress is that the monitoring of anaemia does not routinely target the whole population, with school-aged children (SAC) largely overlooked.Entities:
Keywords: Kenya; anaemia; prevalence; school-aged children
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32484872 PMCID: PMC7405173 DOI: 10.1093/trstmh/traa032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg ISSN: 0035-9203 Impact factor: 2.184
Summary statistics of study population in 59 332 children aged 6 mo to 14 y in Kenya from 2008–2015
| Characteristic | School survey 2008–2010, n (%) | MIS 2010, n (%) | MIS 2015, n (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of children | 38 630 | 10 651 | 10 051 | |
| Number of clusters/schools | 399 | 240 | 245 | |
| Gender | Female | 19 281 (49.9%) | 5340 (50.8%) | 5086 (49.2%) |
| Age, y (median) | 11 IQR (9–12) | 6 IQR (3–10) | 7 IQR (4–10) | |
| Anaemia status | Anaemic | 9124 (23.6%) | 3613 (32.5%) | 2625 (25.1%) |
| Mild anaemia | 4673 (12.1%) | 1605 (14.5%) | 1313 (12.8) | |
| Moderate anaemia | 4145 (10.7%) | 1843 (16.8%) | 1244 (11.6%) | |
| Severe anaemia | 306 (0.8%) | 165 (1.3%) | 68 (0.6%) | |
Abbreviation: MIS, malaria indicator survey.
*WHO Hb age-specific cutoffs for anaemia were used: mild anaemia (defined as Hb <11 g/dl in children aged <5 y and Hb <11.5 g/dl in children aged 5–11 y and Hb <12 g/dl in children aged 12–14 y); moderate anaemia (defined as Hb <10 g/dl in children aged <5 y and Hb <11 g/dl in all other age groups); severe anaemia (defined as Hb <7 g/dl in children aged <5 y and Hb <8 g/dl in all other age groups.
Figure 1.Trend of haemoglobin values with age and gender among children aged 6 mo to 14 y in Kenya. Averages and standard deviations are shown with males in blue and females in maroon. Children aged <1 y are 6–11 mo.
Figure 2.Severity of anaemia by age and gender among children aged 6 mo to 14 y in Kenya (definitions in footnote to Table 1). Children aged <1 are 6–11 mo.