AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines changes in socio-economic inequalities related to growth measures (height, weight, BMI, grip strength) in Guatemalan children born from 1955 to 1993 during significant socio-economic changes.
  • Utilizing longitudinal data and a method called SITAR, researchers assessed how these growth outcomes varied by socio-economic position (measured by the school children attended) over time.
  • Results indicated a decrease in height gap and other growth inequalities between low and high socio-economic groups, though disparities still existed, raising concerns for long-term human capital and health outcomes in urban Guatemala.

Article Abstract

Objective: To investigate changes in socio-economic inequalities in growth in height, weight, BMI and grip strength in children born during 1955-1993 in Guatemala, a period of marked socio-economic-political change.

Design: We modelled longitudinal data on height, weight, BMI and hand grip strength using Super-Imposition by Translation and Rotation (SITAR). Internal Z-scores summarising growth size, timing and intensity (peak growth velocity, e.g. cm/year) were created to investigate inequalities by socio-economic position (SEP; measured by school attended). Interactions of SEP with date of birth were investigated to capture secular changes in inequalities.

Setting: Urban and peri-urban schools in the region of Guatemala City, Guatemala.

Participants: Participants were 40 484 children and adolescents aged 3-19 years of Ladino and Maya ancestry (nobservations 157 067).

Results: The difference in height (SITAR size) between lowest and highest SEP decreased from -2·0 (95 % CI -2·2, -1·9) sd to -1·4 (95 % CI -1·5, -1·3) sd in males, and from -2·0 (95 % CI -2·1, -1·9) sd to -1·2 (95 % CI -1·3, -1·2) sd in females over the study period. Inequalities also reduced for weight, BMI and grip strength, due to greater secular increases in lowest-SEP groups. The puberty period was earlier and shorter in higher-SEP individuals (earlier SITAR timing and higher SITAR intensity). All SEP groups showed increases in BMI intensity over time.

Conclusions: Inequality narrowed between the 1960s and 1990s. The lowest-SEP groups were still >1 sd shorter than the highest. Risks remain for reduced human capital and poorer population health for urban Guatemalans.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7196735PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1368980019003239DOI Listing

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