Prevalence thresholds for wasting, overweight and stunting in children under 5 years
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Published:2018-10-09
Issue:1
Volume:22
Page:175-179
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ISSN:1368-9800
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Container-title:Public Health Nutrition
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Public Health Nutr.
Author:
de Onis Mercedes,Borghi Elaine,Arimond Mary,Webb Patrick,Croft Trevor,Saha Kuntal,De-Regil Luz Maria,Thuita Faith,Heidkamp Rebecca,Krasevec Julia,Hayashi Chika,Flores-Ayala Rafael
Abstract
AbstractObjectivePrevalence ranges to classify levels of wasting and stunting have been used since the 1990s for global monitoring of malnutrition. Recent developments prompted a re-examination of existing ranges and development of new ones for childhood overweight. The present paper reports from the WHO–UNICEF Technical Expert Advisory Group on Nutrition Monitoring.DesignThresholds were developed in relation tosdof the normative WHO Child Growth Standards. The international definition of ‘normal’ (2sdbelow/above the WHO standards median) defines the first threshold, which includes 2·3 % of the area under the normalized distribution. Multipliers of this ‘very low’ level (rounded to 2·5 %) set the basis to establish subsequent thresholds. Country groupings using the thresholds were produced using the most recent set of national surveys.SettingOne hundred and thirty-four countries.SubjectsChildren under 5 years.ResultsFor wasting and overweight, thresholds are: ‘very low’ (<2·5 %), ‘low’ (≈1–2 times 2·5 %), ‘medium’ (≈2–4 times 2·5 %), ‘high’ (≈4–6 times 2·5 %) and ‘very high’ (>≈6 times 2·5 %). For stunting, thresholds are: ‘very low’ (<2·5 %), ‘low’ (≈1–4 times 2·5 %), ‘medium’ (≈4–8 times 2·5 %), ‘high’ (≈8–12 times 2·5 %) and ‘very high’ (>≈12 times 2·5 %).ConclusionsThe proposed thresholds minimize changes and keep coherence across anthropometric indicators. They can be used for descriptive purposes to map countries according to severity levels; by donors and global actors to identify priority countries for action; and by governments to trigger action and target programmes aimed at achieving ‘low’ or ‘very low’ levels. Harmonized terminology will help avoid confusion and promote appropriate interventions.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)
Reference22 articles.
1. Factor Collaboration (NCD-RisC) (2017) Worldwide trends in body-mass index, underweight, overweight, and obesity from 1975 to 2016: a pooled analysis of 2416 population-based measurement studies in 128·9 million children, adolescents, and adults;NCD;Lancet
2. UNICEF, World Health Organization & World Bank (2017) UNICEF–WHO–World Bank Joint Child Malnutrition Estimates. Key findings of the 2017 edition. http://www.who.int/nutgrowthdb/jme_brochoure2017.pdf?ua=1 (accessed December 2017)
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