AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines sex differences in undernutrition prevalence in sub-Saharan Africa, revealing that boys are generally more susceptible than girls.
  • Analysis of 128 Demographic and Health Surveys covering over 700,000 children under five showed significant male-to-female ratios for stunting, wasting, underweight, and concurrent conditions.
  • Findings indicate that sex ratios of stunting and concurrent wasting fluctuate with age, and vary with mortality levels, while comparisons with other growth standards (NCHS-1977 and WHO) yielded different results.

Article Abstract

The study investigates sex differences in the prevalence of undernutrition in sub-Saharan Africa. Undernutrition was defined by -scores using the CDC-2000 growth charts. Some 128 Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) were analysed, totalling 700,114 children under-five. The results revealed a higher susceptibility of boys to undernutrition. Male-to-female ratios of prevalence averaged 1.18 for stunting (height-for-age -score <-2.0); 1.01 for wasting (weight-for-height -score <-2.0); 1.05 for underweight (weight-for-age -score <-2.0); and 1.29 for concurrent wasting and stunting (weight-for-height and height-for-age -scores <-2.0). Sex ratios of prevalence varied with age for stunting and concurrent wasting and stunting, with higher values for children age 0-23 months and lower values for children age 24-59 months. Sex ratios of prevalence tended to increase with declining level of mortality for stunting, underweight and concurrent wasting and stunting, but remained stable for wasting. Comparisons were made with other anthropometric reference sets (NCHS-1977 and WHO-), and the results were found to differ somewhat from those obtained with CDC-2000. Possible rationales for these patterns are discussed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0021932021000468DOI Listing

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