scholarly journals Maternal Characteristics Determine Stunting in Children of Less than Five Years of Age Results from a National Probabilistic Survey

2008 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. CMPed.S1019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Teresa Shamah-Levy ◽  
Lucia Cuevas Nasu ◽  
Hortensia Moreno-Macias ◽  
Eric Monterrubio-Flores ◽  
Marco Antonio Avila-Arcos

Background Maternal nutrition and some variables are the main determining factors of birthweight and delayed intrauterine growth of children. Objective To explore the association between the mothers’ biological and sociodemographic characteristics, and the anthropometry status in children under five years of age. Design The population consisted of a sub-sample of 1,047 mother-and-child selected pairs from the probabilistic National Nutrition Survey, carried out in Mexico. Mother-and-child pairs included mothers aged 12 to 49 years, with children under five years of age. Data on sociodemographic characteristics, obstetric history, 24-hour recall dietary intake, and the women and children's anthropometry were collected. The association between maternal characteristics and children's anthropometry status was assessed using multiple logistic regression models. Result Nearly 16.7% of the children <5y of age were stunted (13.5% ≤ 2y and 18.8% > 2y). The height/age of the children was severely affected by maternal height and birth order. In addition, the interaction between socioeconomic level and maternal schooling had a marginal effect (p = 0.09) in the ≤2y group. On the other hand, whether the family received social services and the interaction between maternal height and a dichotomy urbanism variable were significant (p = 0.05) and (p < 0.01) respectively in >2y group. Conclusion Some biological and socioeconomic characteristics among mothers have a negative effect on their children's attained size, especially in the period between 2 and 5 years of age.

2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 991-1001
Author(s):  
Nur Elly Nur Elly ◽  
Asmawati Asmawati ◽  
Betty Yosephin ◽  
Rahma Annisa ◽  
Khelli Fitria Annuril ◽  
...  

ABSTRAK Pencegahan stunting merupakan program prioritas pembangunan di Indonesia sampai tahun 2024. Nutrisi pada periode 1000 Hari Pertama Kehidupan (HPK), yaitu sejak janin berada dalam kandungan sampai usia 2 tahun kelahiran sangat penting diperhatikan sebagai upaya pencegahan resiko stunting. Kader kesehatan berperan penting dalam self-care management nutrisi ibu selama kehamilan sebagai upaya pencegahan stunting. Permasalahan yang dihadapi kader Kesehatan di Desa Talang Benuang dan Lokasi Baru Kecamatan Air Priukan sebagai desa dari 20 desa lokasi khusus (lokus) stunting di Kabupaten Seluma tahun 2020 adalah kurangnya pengetahuan tentang stunting dan 1000 HPK sehingga belum memiliki bekal yang cukup untuk melaksanakan perannya sebagai pelaku penggerak masyarakat dalam mewujudkan kesehatan termasuk dalam pencegahan dan penanganan stunting. Tujuan  PKM  adalah memberdayakan kader sebagai garda terdepan dalam meningkatkan self-care management nutrisi ibu hamil untuk  meminimalisir risiko stunting pada anak balita. Peserta pelatihan sebanyak 11 (sebelas) orang kader. Metode kegiatan adalah melakukan sosialisasi, pelatihan, dan pendampingan kader dalam self-care management nutrisi ibu hamil. Hasil kegiatan adalah adanya peningkatan pengetahuan, keterampilan serta kemandirian kader dalam memberikan edukasi dan pendampingan pada ibu hamil dalam self-care management nutrisi. Kader diharapkan  mengaplikasikan pengetahuan dan kemampuan yang telah diperoleh untuk memberikan edukasi dan pendampingan terhadap ibu hamil di wilayahnya. Kata Kunci : Kader kesehatan, Self-care management nutrisi, Stunting  ABSTRACT Prevention of stunting is a priority development program in Indonesia until 2024. Nutrition in the first 1000 days of life (HPK), which is from the fetus is in the womb until 2 years old, is very important to consider as an effort to prevent the risk of stunting. Health cadres play an important role in the self-care management of maternal nutrition during pregnancy as an effort to prevent stunting. The problem faced by health cadres in Talang Benuang Village and Lokasi Baru Village of Air Priukan Subdistrict as a village of 20 special locations (locus) for stunting in Seluma Regency in 2020 is a lack of knowledge about stunting and 1000 HPK so that they do not have sufficient provisions to carry out their role as perpetrators driving the community in realizing health, including the prevention and management of stunting. The goal of PKM is to empower cadres as the front guard in improving nutrition self-care management for pregnant women to minimize the risk of stunting in children under five. The participants were 11 cadres. The method was to conduct socialization, training, and mentoring cadres in self-care management of nutrition for pregnant women. The result of the activity was an increase in knowledge, skills, and independence of cadres in providing education and assistance to pregnant women in nutrition management self-care. Cadres were expected to apply the knowledge and abilities they have acquired to provide education and assistance to pregnant women in their area. Keywords: Health cadres, Self-care management nutrition, Stunting


1998 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 318-320
Author(s):  
Haifa Tawfeek ◽  
Shalan A. Al-Mashikhi ◽  
Amer Salom

This study is part of a national nutrition survey conducted in Iraq during 1992 and 1993. Anthropometric measurements were obtained in 3,616 children under five years of age. Of those children, 24% were diagnosed as moderately undernourished and 6% as severely undernourished by mid-upper-arm circumference measurements. According to weight-for-height, only 11% were diagnosed as moderately undernourished and 3% as severely undernourished. The discrepancy between the results of these two measurements can be minimized by establishing a new cut-off level for mid-upper-arm circumference for defining malnutrition in our population.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark Suprenant ◽  
Anuraag Gopaluni ◽  
Meredith Dyson ◽  
Fauzia Shafique ◽  
Muhammad Zaman

Abstract IntroductionThe ongoing war in Yemen continues to pose challenges for health care workers in the country. The fighting has destroyed public infrastructure including primary and secondary health care facilities, hindered the movement of people, food, fuel, medical supplies, and information, and restricted access to and availability of social services including safe drinking water and sanitation. This has led to the increase in the spread of diarrheal diseases, including cholera, which, despite the efficacy of zinc and oral rehydration salt solutions to treat the resulting dehydration, remains one of greatest sources of mortality in children under five years old. In contexts such as Yemen, Health Management Information Systems and Surveillance Systems are weak and unreliable to begin with, with conflict and linked disruption of social services these systems are further weakened making monitoring of the situation and evidence-based planning and implementation even more difficult. Without information on the total number of children suffering from these diseases, it is difficult for health officials and aid organizations to make policy level decisions, inform annual and humanitarian response plans, set targets, mobilize resources, order supplies, deploy resources (human and supplies) and monitor based on needs, leading to poor quality decisions. These reasons, coupled with lack of access, security, and financial and human resources make it even more important in conflict settings, than in non-conflict settings, to know where it is best to invest. This manuscript looks at the development of a computational model designed to draw upon available health data and supplement it with additional sources and acceptable assumptions to provide some of the missing data via health access chart to better inform decision making on the above-mentioned policies. This chart is designed to show what percentage of the total estimated sick population is receiving medical assistance without the need for health workers to place themselves in the way of any additional harm.MethodsA Markov model, which is a probabilistic model that shows how a population moves between different states overtime, was created based on an analysis of Yemen clinical register data from the Ministry of Public Health collected through a third party hired for monitoring purposes covering the period of May through September of 2018. The model was designed with four states for children to transition between over a weekly basis. The probability that a child transitioned from the Sick state to the In-treatment state during any given week was a time varying function based on the average precipitation recorded monthly for 115 years and the state of the roads and bridges during that week as assessed by the World Food Program. The model examined the number of children treated, incidence rate, mortality rate, treatment efficacy and treatment mortality. Once validated, the model was run for 2019 to provide the weekly estimated coverage of children being treated for diarrheal diseases throughout all of Yemen. ResultsThe model was able to recreate the observed trends in treatment on the ground with no significant difference between model output and provided validation data for all metrics. When combined with infrastructure data, the curve of best fit created for the precipitation values depicted a seasonal increase in the number of estimated new diarrheal cases in children under five and a resulting decreasing in the number receiving treatment. This combination has led predictions for the percent coverage to range between an average weekly minimum of 1.73% around the 28th week of the year to a weekly maximum weekly coverage of just over 5% around the new year. ConclusionThe model created and presented in this manuscript shows a seasonal trend in the spread of diarrheal disease in children under five living in Yemen. Despite the assistance of aid organizations in attending to those in need, during the mid-year rains up to 98% are unable to receive medical aid. The coverage map indicates that community outreach or other types of assistance where aid proactively goes out to those in need should be scaled up during and just prior to these periods. This would serve to offset the decrease in the number receiving treatment by lessening the prohibitive travel burden on families during these times.


1961 ◽  
Vol 107 (448) ◽  
pp. 481-485 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. L. Kahan

The value of medical and social services in the domiciliary care of the mentally subnormal child has been under considerable discussion during recent years. The mentally subnormal child is known to show many of the same traits as the normal child when removed from the type of personal relationship between mother and child, which is normal within the ordinary home. It is generally agreed that hospitalization of the normal child under five should be avoided if possible, but it must be remembered that this attitude is equally important in the case of the mentally abnormal or psychotic child. Indeed such children have great difficulty in coming to terms with their environment, and as a result are even more vulnerable to the breakdown of the mother/child relationship than the normal child. It is important, therefore, to look critically at the reasons given for applying for admission to a hospital for mental subnormality, and this study attempts to analyse the reasons put forward in a sample of patients admitted during the years 1955–59, and to discuss possible methods of improving the existing mechanisms.


Author(s):  
Juliandi ◽  
Cecep Tribowo

Group therapy is a method of treatment that is carried out when a patient is met in a certain time frame with personnel who meet certain requirements. The quality of life is closely related to the environment where the elderly live. The elderly generally live with their families, but not a few elderly people live in nursing homes. There is a significant difference in the quality of life of the elderly in the UPT Social Services for the elderly and children under five in Binjai area between before and after giving group activity therapy in the intervention group with a p value of 0.008.There was no significant difference in the quality of life of the elderly in the UPT Social Services for the elderly and children under five in Binjai area between before and after giving group activity therapy to the control group with a p value of 0.317.There was a significant difference in the quality of life of the elderly in the UPT Social Services for the elderly and children under five in Binjai area between the intervention group and the control group with a p value of 0.043.


Author(s):  
Joana Abou-Rizk ◽  
Theresa Jeremias ◽  
Lara Nasreddine ◽  
Lamis Jomaa ◽  
Nahla Hwalla ◽  
...  

The objective was to assess the prevalence of anemia and nutritional status of mothers and children under five years among Syrian refugees in Lebanon and to identify nutritional deficiencies among pregnant, lactating, and non-pregnant non-lactating (NPNLM) mothers. A cross-sectional study was conducted among Syrian refugee mothers with children under five years in Greater Beirut, Lebanon (n = 433). Data on socio-economic status, maternal health, lifestyle characteristics, dietary intake, anthropometric measurements, and hemoglobin concentrations were collected. The prevalence of anemia was 21.7% among mothers and 30.5% among children. NPNLM with overweight/obesity and an at-risk waist circumference (WC) had 14.7-times and 10.9-times higher odds of anemia than mothers with normal WC and weight. Children of anemic mothers had 2.7-times and 4.4-times higher odds of total and mild anemia than those of non-anemic. Higher odds of mild anemia were found among children of lactating mothers than of NPNLM. A high percent energy intake of total fat and sugar was found among all mothers. Nutritional inadequacy was identified in higher proportions of lactating and pregnant mothers than NPNLM. Our findings highlighted the co-existence of overnutrition and anemia among Syrian refugee mothers and undernutrition among children from the same household. Culture-specific interventions are needed to support maternal nutrition, to ensure the health and wellbeing of their offspring.


1966 ◽  
Vol 112 (492) ◽  
pp. 1117-1118 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neil Mitchell ◽  
Christopher Turton

The purpose of this paper is to describe the routine admission of children below school age with their mothers, it being postulated that this would be to the benefit of both and that the emotional needs of the children would continue to be met during the mothers' treatment. Modern paediatric practice emphasizes the maintenance of the close emotional bond between mother and child, and it was felt that if a mother is mentally ill, the resulting psychological trauma to her child should not be made worse by separating them.


Author(s):  
Roichatul Djannah ◽  
◽  
Siti Maisaroh ◽  

Background: In 2015, the prevalence of stunting among children under five years old in Indonesia was 36.4%. It means that more than a third or around 8.8 million children under five years old height is below the standard for their age. This stunting is above the threshold set by WHO of 20%. The prevalence of stunting / stunting for Indonesian under five is the second largest in the Southeast Asia region after Laos, which reached 43.8%. This study aimed to determine the effect of family role on stunting among children under five years old. Subjects and Method: A cross-sectional was enrolled by 242 of 615 families with children under five years old in Bojong Jaya Village, Karawaci, Tangerang, Banten. The dependent variable was stunting. The independent variables were knowledge, family income and parenting style. The data collection was carried out by measuring height, in-depth interview, and questionnaire. The data were analyzed using Chi-square test. Results: The percentage of the stunting incidence was 20.2%. Family income (OR= 2.31; 95% CI= 1.19 to 4.47; p= 0.012) and parenting style (OR= 2.68; 95% CI= 1.36 to 5.31; p= 0.004) were associated with stunting incidence and they were statistically significant. There was a significant relationship between knowledge on the incidence of stunting (OR= 2.80; 95% CI 1.41 to 5.53; p= 0.002), and it was statistically significant. Conclusion: There is a relationship between family income, parenting style, and knowledge on the incidence of stunting among children under five years old. There needs to be a comprehensive program in building family resilience and multisector empowerment to increase family income, maternal education and knowledge of maternal nutrition to reduce the incidence of stunting. Keywords: empowerment, family, stunting Correspondence: Roichatul Djannah. Academy of midwifery Karya Bunda Husada. Jl. Imam Bonjol No 77 RT02 / RW01, Bojong Jaya Village, Karawaci District, Tangerang City, Banten, Indonesia, Email: [email protected]. Mobile: 081290257780 DOI: https://doi.org/10.26911/the7thicph.02.07


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