| Literature DB >> 33902778 |
Renuka Jayatissa1, Himali P Herath1, Amila G Perera1, Thulasika T Dayaratne1, Nawmali D De Alwis1, Hiyare Palliyage Laksiri K Nanayakkara2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To determine changes and factors associated with child malnutrition, obesity in women and household food insecurity before and after the first wave of COVID-19 pandemic.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Food security; Obesity; Overweight; Stunting; Wasting
Year: 2021 PMID: 33902778 PMCID: PMC8144823 DOI: 10.1017/S1368980021001841
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Public Health Nutr ISSN: 1368-9800 Impact factor: 4.022
Fig. 1Data collection summary
Comparison of baseline characteristics of selected households and the UHNS-2019 cohort
| Follow-up study, September 2020 ( | UHNS-2019, September 2019 ( |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of members in the household | |||
| 1–3 | 18·8 | 20·0 | 0·71 |
| 4–5 | 52·7 | 47·9 | 0·23 |
| ≥ 6 | 28·5 | 32·1 | 0·33 |
| Type of the family | |||
| Extended | 37·2 | 39·1 | 0·63 |
| Nuclear | 62·8 | 60·9 | 0·63 |
| Residency status | |||
| Living since birth | 58·5 | 48·8 | 0·02 |
| Permanent but not living since birth | 39·6 | 46·3 | 0·09 |
| Migrant | 1·9 | 5·0 | 0·06 |
| Ethnicity | |||
| Sinhalese | 45·5 | 37·8 | 0·11 |
| Tamil | 33·0 | 36·0 | 0·53 |
| Muslim | 21·5 | 25·9 | 0·31 |
| Other | 0·0 | 0·2 | 0·62 |
UHNS-2019, Urban Health and Nutrition Study 2019.
Nutritional status of children and women
| Nutritional status indicator | Follow-up study, September 2020 | UHNS-2019, September 2019 |
| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Mean |
|
| Mean |
| ||
| Children ( | |||||||
| WHZ | 109 | −0·66 | 1·35 | 109 | −0·90 | 1·09 | 0·02 |
| HAZ | 109 | −0·62 | 1·25 | 109 | −0·78 | 1·24 | 0·009 |
|
| % | 95 % CI |
| % | 95 % CI | ||
| Moderate to severe wasting | 20 | 18·3 | 11·9, 25·7 | 15 | 13·7 | 7·3, 20·2 | 0·26 |
| Moderate to severe stunting | 13 | 11·9 | 6·4, 18·3 | 16 | 14·7 | 7·4, 21·1 | 0·37 |
| Overweight or obese | 9 | 8·3 | 4·4, 15·0 | 4 | 3·7 | 1·4, 9·1 | 0·12 |
| Concurrent wasting and stunting | 6 | 5·5 | 2·1, 11·6 | 6 | 5·5 | 2·1, 11·6 | 1 |
| Women BMI categories ( | |||||||
| Underweight | 4 | 3·1 | 1·2, 7·9 | 5 | 3·9 | 1·7, 8·9 | 0·4 |
| Normal | 33 | 26·0 | 19·1, 34·2 | 34 | 26·8 | 19·8, 35·1 | |
| Overweight | 51 | 40·2 | 32·0, 48·9 | 51 | 40·2 | 32·0, 48·9 | |
| Obesity grade 1 | 24 | 18·9 | 13·0, 26·6 | 22 | 17·3 | 11·7, 24·8 | |
| Obesity grade 2 | 12 | 9·4 | 5·5, 15·8 | 12 | 9·4 | 5·5, 15·8 | |
| Obesity grade 3 | 3 | 2·4 | 0·8, 6·7 | 3 | 2·4 | 0·8, 6·7 | |
| DBM in households ( | |||||||
| DBM | 9 | 10·8 | 4·8, 18·1 | 11 | 13·3 | 6·0, 20·5 | 0·3 |
WHZ, weight-for-height-Z; HAZ, height-for-age-Z; UHNS-2019, Urban Health and Nutrition Study 2019; DBM, double burden of malnutrition.
Paired t test.
McNemar test.
McNemar–Bowker test.
Fig. 2WHZ and HAZ categories at follow-up study in 2020 September and baseline UHNS-2019. WHZ, weight-for-height-Z; HAZ, height-for-age-Z; UHNS-2019, Urban Health and Nutrition Study 2019
Exposure to COVID-19 infection, food security status, changes in household income and expenditure during the COVID-19 pandemic (n 207)
| Characteristic | Follow-up study, September 2020 | UHNS-2019, September 2019 |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| % |
| % | ||
| Exposure to COVID-19 infection | |||||
| Infected | 0 | 0·0 | – | – | |
| Quarantined | 0 | 0·0 | – | – | |
| Food security status | |||||
| Severe food insecurity | 12 | 5·8 | 24 | 11·6 | <0·001 |
| Moderate food insecurity | 50 | 24·2 | 30 | 14·5 | |
| Mild food insecurity | 82 | 39·6 | 35 | 16·9 | |
| Food secure | 63 | 30·4 | 117 | 57·0 | |
| Main coping mechanisms | |||||
| Sold household or productive assets | 46 | 22·2 | 35 | 16·9 | 0·16 |
| Reduced non-food cost (education, health, etc) | 55 | 26·6 | 24 | 11·6 | <0·001 |
| Spent savings | 100 | 48·3 | 44 | 21·3 | <0·001 |
| Borrowed money from bank | 42 | 20·3 | 29 | 14·0 | 0·1 |
| Borrowed food/money from friends/relatives | 105 | 50·7 | 48 | 23·2 | <0·001 |
| Looked for additional income sources | 35 | 16·9 | 23 | 11·1 | 0·1 |
| Per capita monthly income (USD) | |||||
| < 27 | 50 | 24·2 | 23 | 11·1 | <0·001 |
| 27–41 | 53 | 25·6 | 43 | 20·8 | |
| 40·1, 59 | 53 | 26·1 | 67 | 32·9 | |
| > 59·1 | 51 | 24·2 | 73 | 35·3 | |
| Change in household income during last 6 months | |||||
| Increased | 2 | 1·0 | – | – | |
| Decreased | 187 | 90·3 | – | – | |
| No change | 18 | 8·7 | – | – | |
| Reasons to decrease household income during last 6 months ( | |||||
| Loss of employment | 121 | 64·7 | – | – | |
| No extra income | 75 | 40·1 | – | – | |
| Deduct the salary by employee | 92 | 49·2 | – | – | |
| Change in household expenditure during last 6 months | |||||
| Increased | 110 | 53·1 | – | – | |
| Decreased | 33 | 15·9 | – | – | |
| No change | 64 | 30·9 | – | – | |
| Reasons to increase household expenditure during last 6 months ( | |||||
| High food price | 109 | 99·1 | – | – | |
| Paid school fees | 32 | 29·1 | – | – | |
| Paid loans/vehicle lease | 30 | 27·3 | – | – | |
| Medicine cost | 27 | 24·5 | – | – | |
UHNS-2019, Urban Health and Nutrition Study 2019
McNemar–Bowker test.
McNemar test.
Prevalence of wasting (moderate to severe), stunting (moderate to severe) and concurrent wasting and stunting (WaSt) by background characteristics in the follow-up study 2020
| Variables | Wasting | Stunting | WaSt | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| % |
| |||
| Age of the child in months | ||||
| 12–23 | 13·6 | 4·5 | 4·5 | 22 |
| 24–35 | 23·3 | 23·3 | 13·3 | 30 |
| 36–47 | 20·8 | 4·2 | 4·2 | 24 |
| 48–59 | 12·5 | 12·5 | 0·0 | 16 |
| ≥ 60 | 18·8 | 12·5 | 5·9 | 17 |
| Sex of the child | ||||
| Male | 19·0 | 12·7 | 6·2 | 63 |
| Female | 17·4 | 10·9 | 6·5 | 46 |
| Birth weight of the child ( | ||||
| < 2500 | 35·3 | 17·6 | 11·1 | 17 |
| 2500–3000 | 14·3 | 11·9 | 4·8 | 41 |
| > 3000 | 14·9 | 10·6 | 6·4 | 51 |
| Current wasting of children | ||||
| Severe (<−3 | – |
| – | 1 |
| Moderate (−3 | – | 26·3 | – | 19 |
| Mild (−2 | – | 3·6 | – | 28 |
| Adequate (>−1 | – | 9·8 | – | 61 |
| Wasting of children 1 year back | ||||
| Severe (<−3 |
| 33·3 |
| 3 |
| Moderate (−3 | 75·0 | 25·0 | 25·0 | 12 |
| Mild (−2 | 16·2 | 10·8 | 2·7 | 37 |
| Adequate (>−1 | 5·3 | 8·8 | 3·4 | 58 |
| Current stunting of children | ||||
| Severe (<−3 |
| – | – | 2 |
| Moderate (−3 | 54·5 | – | – | 11 |
| Mild (−2 | 23·3 | – | – | 30 |
| Adequate (≥−1 | 10·6 | – | – | 66 |
| Stunting of children 1 year back | ||||
| Severe (<−3 |
|
|
| 3 |
| Moderate (−3 | 46·2 | 69·2 | 30·8 | 13 |
| Mild (−2 | 26·9 | 3·8 | 3·8 | 26 |
| Adequate (≥−1 | 9·0 | 0·0 | 1·5 | 68 |
| Current food security status | ||||
| Food secure | 21·2 | 11·1 | 8·8 | 63 |
| Mild food insecurity | 14·3 | 6·2 | 4·8 | 82 |
| Moderate food insecurity | 15·4 | 22·2 | 3·8 | 50 |
| Severe food insecurity | 37·5 | 8·3 | 12·5 | 12 |
| Food security 1 year back | ||||
| Food secure | 20·6 | 12·1 | 7·8 | 117 |
| Mild food insecurity | 6·2 | 9·5 | 0·0 | 35 |
| Moderate food insecurity | 16·7 | 11·5 | 5·6 | 30 |
| Severe food insecurity | 25·0 | 25·0 | 8·3 | 24 |
| Current household per capita income (USD) | ||||
| < 27 | 22·6 | 16·1 | 9·7 | 50 |
| 27–41 | 13·8 | 6·9 | 0·0 | 53 |
| 40·1–59 | 22·6 | 12·9 | 6·5 | 53 |
| > 59·1 | 11·1 | 11·1 | 10·5 | 51 |
| Household per capita income 1 year back (USD) | ||||
| < 27 | 20·0 | 20·0 | 10·0 | 23 |
| 27–41 | 21·4 | 14·3 | 7·1 | 43 |
| 40·1–59 | 21·4 | 11·9 | 9·3 | 67 |
| > 59·1 | 10·3 | 6·9 | 0·0 | 73 |
| Pattern of household income during last 6 months | ||||
| Increased | 0·0 | 0·0 | 0·0 | 2 |
| Decreased | 19·4 | 13·3 | 7·1 | 187 |
| No change | 10·0 | 0·0 | 0·0 | 18 |
| Pattern of household expenditure during last 6 months | ||||
| Increased | 20·3 | 15·6 | 9·2 | 110 |
| Decreased | 18·8 | 12·5 | 6·2 | 33 |
| No change | 13·8 | 3·4 | 0·0 | 64 |
| Total | 18·3 | 11·9 | 5·5 | 109 |
P < 0·01.
P < 0·001.