| Literature DB >> 33110583 |
Jacob P Beckerman-Hsu1, Pritha Chatterjee2, Rockli Kim3, Smriti Sharma4, S V Subramanian5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Anthropometry is the most commonly used approach for assessing nutritional need among children. Anthropometry alone, however, cannot differentiate between the two immediate causes of undernutrition: inadequate diet vs disease. We present a typology of nutritional need by simultaneously considering dietary and anthropometric measures, dietary and anthropometric failures (DAF), and assess its distribution among children in India.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33110583 PMCID: PMC7569191 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.10.020424
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Interpretation of the four types of dietary and anthropometric failures
| Anthropometric failure | No anthropometric failure | |
|---|---|---|
| • Low intake of key nutrients | • May have low intake of nutrients with little impact on body size | |
| • May have high nutritional losses | • Overlooked by anthropometric indicators of undernutrition | |
| • Highest amount of unmet nutritional need | Nutrition-specific intervention may be most needed (eg, providing supplemental food) | |
| • May have high nutritional losses and/or low intake of key nutrients or calories, resulting in anthropometric failure despite meeting dietary standards • Nutrition-sensitive intervention may be most needed (eg, sanitation) | • Lowest amount of unmet nutritional need |
Frequency and percent of children aged 6-23 months in each type of dietary and anthropometric failures in India*
| Any anthropometric failure | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 29 557 (44.0%) | 24 427 (36.3%) | 53 984 (80.3%) | |||
| 6581 (9.8%) | 6682 (9.9%) | 13 263 (19.7%) | |||
| Total | 36 138 (53.7%) | 31 109 (46.3%) | 67 247 | ||
| 46.1% | |||||
Figure 1National estimates of population counts in four types of dietary and anthropometric failures among children 6-23 months old in India.
Percent and frequency of children with dietary and anthropometric failures amongst all children aged 6-23 months in India*
| Stunting | Underweight | Wasting | Total | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 19 528 (29.0%) | 34 456 (51.2%) | 17 882 (26.6%) | 36 102 (53.7%) | 12 789 (19.0%) | 41 195 (61.3%) | 53 984 (80.3%) | ||
| 4642 (6.9%) | 8621 (12.8%) | 3523 (5.2%) | 9740 (14.5%) | 2532 (3.8%) | 10 731 (16.0%) | 13 263 (19.7%) | ||
| 24 170 (35.9%) | 43 077 (64.1%) | 21 405 (31.8%) | 45 842 (68.2%) | 15 321 (22.8%) | 51 926 (77.2%) | 67 247 (100.0%) | ||
| 58.1% | 58.9% | 65.0% | ||||||
Figure 2Percentage of types of dietary and anthropometric failures by districts (A) and parliamentary constituencies (B) in India.
High focus districts in the top decile for dietary failure only (DFO) and anthropometric failure only (AFO) in India
| DFO | AFO | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Nicobars, South Andaman | Andaman and Nicobar Islands | North & Middle Andaman | Andaman and Nicobar Islands |
| Chittoor, Guntur, West Godavari | Andhra Pradesh | Anjaw, Lower Dibang Valley, Lower Subansiri | Arunachal Pradesh |
| East Siang | Arunachal Pradesh | Dibrugarh, Golaghat | Assam |
| Dima Hasao | Assam | Baramula, Doda Kargil, Punch, Rajouri, Ramban, Srinagar | Jammu and Kashmir |
| Chandigarh | Chandigarh | Simdega | Jharkhand |
| North Goa | Goa | Chikmagalur | Karnataka |
| Porbandar, Vadodara | Gujarat | Kollam, Kozhikode, Malappuram, Thiruvananthapuram | Kerala |
| Rewari | Haryana | Yavatmal | Maharashtra |
| Bilaspur, Kinnaur, Kullu. Lahul and Spiti, Mandi, Sirmaur, Una | Himachal Pradesh | East Garo Hills, East Khasi Hills, Ribhoi, South Garo Hills, West Garo Hills, West Khasi Hills | Meghalaya |
| Anantnag, Badgam, Shupiyan | Jammu and Kashmir | Kiphire | Nagaland |
| Hassan | Karnataka | Kendujhar, Subarnapur | Odisha |
| Alappuzha, Palakkad. Pathanamthitta | Kerala | Mahe, Puducherry, Yanam | Puducherry |
| Mandsaur | Madhya Pradesh | South District, West District | Sikkim |
| Bhandara, Kolhapur, Mumbai Suburban | Maharashtra | Cuddalore, Dharmapuri, Dindigul, Erode, Kancheepuram, Karur, Krishnagiri, Madurai, Nagapattinam, Namakkal, Perambalur, Pudukkottai, Thanjavur, The Nilgiris, Theni, Thiruvallur, Thiruvarur,Thoothukkudi, Tiruchirappalli, Tirunelveli, Tiruppur, Tiruvannamalai, Vellore, Viluppuram, Virudhunagar | Tamil Nadu |
| Bishnupur | Manipur | Bankura, Barddhaman, Nadia, Paschim Medinipur, Puruliya | West Bengal |
| Lunglei | Mizoram | ||
| Mokokchung, Peren, Tuensang | Nagaland | ||
| Cuttack, Dhenkanal, Puri | Odisha | ||
| Amritsar, Bathinda, Fatehgarh Sahib, Gurdaspur, Kapurthala, Ludhiana, Moga, Rupnagar, Sahibzada Ajit Singh Nagar, Sangrur, Tarn Taran | Punjab | ||
| Ganganagar, Hanumangarh, Jhunjhunun, Nagaur, Sikar | Rajasthan | ||
| Karimnagar, Mahbubnagar, Nizamabad | Telangana | ||
| North Tripura, South Tripura, West Tripura | Tripura | ||
| Gautam Buddha Nagar, Ghaziabad, Saharanpur | Uttar Pradesh | ||
| Garhwal | Uttarakhand | ||
Figure 3District level discordance between dietary and anthropometric failures by states in India. Box shows interquartile range. Whiskers reach up to 1.5 times interquartile range from the first and third quartiles. Remaining points are plotted individually. States are ordered from lowest to highest interquartile range.