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  • 标题:Growth faltering in rural Gambian children after four decades of interventions: a retrospective cohort study
  • 本地全文:下载
  • 作者:Helen M Nabwera ; Anthony J Fulford ; Sophie E Moore
  • 期刊名称:The Lancet Global Health
  • 电子版ISSN:2214-109X
  • 出版年度:2017
  • 卷号:5
  • 期号:2
  • 页码:e208-e216
  • DOI:10.1016/S2214-109X(16)30355-2
  • 出版社:Elsevier B.V.
  • 摘要:Summary

    Background

    Growth faltering remains common in children in sub-Saharan Africa and is associated with substantial morbidity and mortality. Due to a very slow decline in the prevalence of stunting, the total number of children with stunting continues to rise in sub-Saharan Africa. Identification of effective interventions remains a challenge.

    Methods

    We analysed the effect of 36 years of intensive health interventions on growth in infants and young children from three rural Gambian villages. Routine growth data from birth to age 2 years were available for 3659 children between 1976 and 2012. Z scores for weight-for-age, length-for-age, weight-for-length, mid-upper-arm circumference, and head circumference were calculated using the WHO 2006 growth standards. Seasonal patterns of mean Z scores were obtained by Fourier regression. We additionally defined growth faltering as fall in Z score between 3 months and 21 months of age.

    Findings

    We noted secular improvements in all postnatal growth parameters (except weight-for-length), accompanied by declines over time in seasonal variability. The proportion of children with underweight or stunting at 2 years of age halved during four decades of the study period, from 38·7% (95% CI 33·5–44·0) for underweight and 57·1% (51·9–62·4) for stunting. However, despite unprecedented levels of intervention, postnatal growth faltering persisted, leading to poor nutritional status at 24 months (length-for-age Z score −1·36, 95% CI −1·44 to −1·27, weight-for-age Z score −1·20, −1·28 to −1·11, and head circumference Z score −0·51, −0·59 to −0·43). The prevalence of stunting and underweight remained unacceptably high (30·0%, 95% CI 27·0–33·0, for stunting and 22·1%, 19·4 to 24·8, for underweight).

    Interpretation

    A combination of nutrition-sensitive and nutrition-specific interventions has achieved a halving of undernutrition rates, but despite these intensive interventions substantial growth faltering remains. We need to understand the missing contributors to growth faltering to guide development of new interventions.

    Funding

    UK Medical Research Council, UK Department for International Development.

    prs.rt("abs_end"); Introduction

    The combination of fetal growth restriction, underweight, stunting, and wasting in later childhood, suboptimal breastfeeding, and micronutrient deficiencies have been estimated to cause more than 3 million child deaths annually, equivalent to 45% of the global total. 1 Among these factors, the association between undernutrition and mortality is confounded by the effects of deprivation but is probably at least partly causal as evidenced by the greatly elevated hospital case fatality rates of undernourished children compared with better nourished children. 2

    The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) adopted underweight as a key indicator for MDG1, but stunting has since been adopted as the preferred indicator because it offers a more stable index of long-term malnutrition. Latest estimates suggest that rates of stunting have been declining in most regions, but there remain 159 million children with stunting worldwide. 3 The prevalence of stunting has declined most slowly in sub-Saharan Africa, and as a consequence of population growth the absolute number of children with stunting has increased. 3

    Stunting rates fall rapidly as countries pass through the economic transition, but the key elements of progress that alleviate growth faltering are poorly understood, thus limiting the design of interventions and the targeting of health and development inputs in populations that remain impoverished. In this study, we analyse a longitudinal dataset spanning almost four decades of growth monitoring in three rural African villages that have received an unprecedented level of health-orientated interventions. A meta-analysis 4 of previous interventions for water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) has not yielded strong grounds for optimism regarding the likely efficacy of such investments at the levels currently offered. The analysis of randomised trials included more than 4600 children studied over 9–12 months of intervention, and its findings showed no evidence of any beneficial effect on weight-for-age or weight-for-height and only a marginally significant effect on height-for-age of less than a tenth of a standard deviation (0·08 Z score, 95% CI 0·00–0·16). Additionally, the Lancet Series on Maternal and Child Nutrition 5 reinforced the conclusion that nutrition interventions alone will have little effect on childhood undernutrition and estimated that, even if scaled up to 90% coverage, the implementation of all of the currently identified evidence-based interventions relating to nutrition would eliminate only about 20% of stunting globally. The results of ongoing trials to test the effect on growth of WASH interventions are keenly awaited. 6 ; 7

    Research in context

    Evidence before this study

    We searched PubMed and subsequent reference lists of relevant articles, with combinations of the terms “secular trends in growth”, “growth faltering”, “undernutrition”, “wasting”, “stunting”, “underweight”, “African children”, “rural”, “underfive”, and “infants” between June 1, 2012, and Feb 28, 2015. All studies published between Jan 1, 1980, and Feb 28, 2015, that had the relevant search terms (irrespective of language) were included. The quality of the evidence was inadequate for the research questions that we posed, including what the secular trends were in growth in rural African children younger than 2 years during the past four decades, and how the effect of seasonality on the growth of these children has changed during the past four decades. A small number of longitudinal studies from east and central sub-Saharan Africa described the growth patterns in cohorts of young African children over a period of less than a decade, assessing the effect of seasonality, immunisation uptake, and maternal health factors on the patterns of growth faltering. These findings showed that weight declined after the first 3 months in infants and that improved growth in infancy was associated with immunisation status and indices of adequate maternal nutritional status, whereas the rainy season was associated with reduced growth velocity. However, none of these studies described secular trends in these growth patterns. Additionally, the multicountry analyses used cross-sectional data, making interpretation of trends in growth faltering over time within individual populations difficult. Several studies from southern Africa assessed the secular trends in growth in children of school age and older children (older than 8 years), whereas other researchers combined different cohorts in their analyses, making it difficult to contextualise the associated trends in the social environmental and health interventions within the respective populations.

    Added value of this study

    To our knowledge, this study is the first to describe in fine detail the secular trends in longitudinal and seasonal growth patterns of children in a rural sub-Saharan African community with a constant sampling frame. We have documented the introduction of a series of nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive interventions resulting in an unprecedented level of health care in these villages. Simultaneous socioeconomic transitions have occurred with increased access to formal education, employment, and income through remittances from family members overseas. Families have become much less reliant on subsistence farming for their income and nutritional needs. These changes have resulted in reduction of mortality to a tenth of its former level in children younger than 5 years, and major reductions in diarrhoeal and other morbidity. Growth has improved but, despite these profound health and socioeconomic changes, the patterns of childhood growth faltering persist with stunting prevalence remaining at 30%. Our findings indicate that communities must exceed a very high threshold for health and environmental change before growth faltering will be eliminated.

    Implications of all the available evidence

    Children in resource limited settings, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, continue to have suboptimal growth patterns despite access to public health interventions such as immunisation, clean water, and sanitation. Our analysis suggests that mitigation of growth faltering will need these public health interventions to be combined with many other improvements in children's environments, perhaps including improved housing with the provision of piped water directly into the home. Evidence from countries that have passed through the economic transition suggests that poverty reduction promotes such improvements and is accompanied by rapid declines in stunting.

    The implication therefore is that there is a very high threshold for improvements in living conditions, disease elimination, dietary sufficiency, and access to health care that must be exceeded to eliminate malnutrition. On this basis, we predict that current WASH interventions might not be sufficiently intensive to yield a substantial improvement in child growth, and that greater efforts will be required to meet the new UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). 8 In this study we assessed the aggregate improvements in child growth associated with progressive improvements in a wide range of nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive interventions in three rural Gambian villages that have been under continuous growth monitoring for almost 4 decades.

    Methods Study design and participants

    We did a retrospective cohort study using routine growth monitoring data for all children whose date of birth had been recorded to assess trends in growth faltering in children younger than 2 years in the West Kiang region of The Gambia during the past four decades.

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