Childhood growth and education migration among ethnic Tibetan children from Nepal

Author:

Quinn Elizabeth A.1ORCID,Sangmo Jhangchuk2,Burack Sarah3,Childs Geoff1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology Washington University in St. Louis Saint Louis Missouri USA

2. Community Gomba Education Initiative in Nepal (CGEIN) Gorkha District Nepal

3. Department of Surgery, School of Medicine Washington University in St. Louis Saint Louis Missouri USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundEthnographic work among high altitude populations has shown that children are highly mobile—the most recent expression of this is the educational migration of children born at high altitude to boarding schools at lower altitudes. The impact of these patterns of migration on size for age are unknown.AimWe investigated the association between growth in weight and height and educational migration in ethnic Tibetan children living in and out of their natal communities.Subjects and methodsFive hundred and fifty eight children ages three to sixteen from the Nubri Valley, Nepal participated in this study. Three hundred children were living in natal villages and 258 were attending boarding schools in Kathmandu. Height, weight, and skinfold thicknesses were collected and matched to demographic data from the community.ResultsThere was no association between altitude of family residence and size for age z‐scores. Males had lower z‐scores than females; z‐scores for both groups declined with age. Differences in size for age among children in boarding schools were associated with two factors: sex and type of boarding school (individual sponsor or group funded). Individuals attending individually sponsored schools had greater size for age compared to children in group funded schools or in their natal villages; younger children in collectively funded schools were smaller than village peers.ConclusionsDespite popular perceptions, educational outmigration in Himalayan communities may not be associated with improved child growth outcomes and investment in community level schools may be a practical solution for improving child growth and physical and mental health.

Funder

Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Paleontology,Archeology,Genetics,Anthropology,Anatomy,Epidemiology

Reference49 articles.

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