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Secular trends in growth of preschool children from rural Maharashtra, India. | LitMetric

Secular trends in growth of preschool children from rural Maharashtra, India.

J Health Popul Nutr

Division of Animal Sciences, Biometry and Nutrition Unit, Agharkar Research Institute, Pune 411004, India.

Published: December 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study analyzed the growth trends of preschool children in rural Maharashtra, India, comparing data from 1985 and 2001, with 1,171 children in 2001 and 979 in 1985.
  • - It found that growth improvements were greater in older boys and girls, with weight increases (10-15%) outpacing height increases (3-5%), leading to a significant reduction in wasting compared to stunting.
  • - The findings highlight a need for better health and nutrition awareness for younger children and raise concerns about potential childhood obesity in rural areas due to the disproportionate growth in weight over height.

Article Abstract

The study examined the secular trends in growth of preschool children from rural Maharashtra, India, during 1985-2001. Anthropometric data collected on preschool (< 6 years old) children during 2001 (n = 1,171) and 1985 (n = 979) from the same villages were compared. Decadal change increased with age and was marginally higher in boys than girls. It was the lowest among infants (-0.1 to 0.1 kg and 0.4 to 0.7 cm in both sexes) and the highest among boys of 4+ years (1.3 kg and 2.9 cm) and girls of 5+ years (1.2 kg and 2.1 cm). Increase in weight was higher (10-15%) compared to that in height (3-5%) and, consequently, reduction in the prevalence of wasting was marked (around 68% in boys and 48% in girls) than that in stunting (42% in boys and 27% in girls) among these children. The improvement was higher in boys than in girls. Negligible secular changes in younger children indicate the need for creating health and nutritional awareness among rural mothers while relatively higher improvement in weight than height among older children warns the future possibility of childhood adiposity even among rural populations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3763613PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/jhpn.v30i4.13325DOI Listing

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