Larrea Carlos, Freire Wilma
Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales - Sede Ecuador, Quito, Ecuador, and Harvard Center for Society and Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Rev Panam Salud Publica. 2002 May-Jun;11(5-6):356-64. doi: 10.1590/s1020-49892002000500010.
To analyze the effects of socioeconomic, regional, and ethnic conditions on chronic malnutrition in four Andean countries of South America: Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru.
The study was based on Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) for Colombia (1995), Peru (1996), and Bolivia (1997), and on a Living Standard Measurement Survey for Ecuador (1998). We developed an index of household socioeconomic status using categorical principal components analysis. We broke down the prevalence of stunting by socioeconomic status (SES), ethnicity, place of residence (large cities, small cities, towns, and countryside), and region (highland region versus other areas of the country). We applied smoothed regression curves and linear functions to analyze SES effects on stunting, with specific models for Bolivia, Ecuador, and Peru.
Bolivia, Ecuador, and Peru have similar characteristics, with high stunting prevalences overall; higher stunting prevalences in their highland areas, particularly among indigenous populations; and strong socioeconomic disparities. Colombia, in contrast, has a lower stunting prevalence and smaller regional disparities. The socioeconomic gradient of stunting is strong in all four countries, with prevalence rates in the poorest deciles at least three times as high as those in the top decile.
The sharp contrast between the conditions found in Bolivia, Ecuador, and Peru and those in Colombia may be the result of specific ethnic factors affecting indigenous groups; a particular diet profile in the highland areas, with low protein and micronutrient intake; and differences in the long-term economic and social development paths that the countries have taken. Along with the strong socioeconomic gradient in all the countries, the weight of ethnic and regional factors suggests the need to reduce inequality as well as to comprehensively improve education and housing, better target health and nutrition programs, and implement participatory programs integrated into indigenous cultures.
分析社会经济、地区和种族状况对南美洲四个安第斯国家(玻利维亚、哥伦比亚、厄瓜多尔和秘鲁)慢性营养不良的影响。
该研究基于哥伦比亚(1995年)、秘鲁(1996年)和玻利维亚(1997年)的人口与健康调查(DHS),以及厄瓜多尔(1998年)的生活水平测量调查。我们使用分类主成分分析法制定了家庭社会经济地位指数。我们按社会经济地位(SES)、种族、居住地点(大城市、小城市、城镇和农村)以及地区(高原地区与该国其他地区)对发育迟缓患病率进行了分类。我们应用平滑回归曲线和线性函数来分析SES对发育迟缓的影响,并针对玻利维亚、厄瓜多尔和秘鲁建立了特定模型。
玻利维亚、厄瓜多尔和秘鲁具有相似的特征,总体发育迟缓患病率较高;其高原地区的发育迟缓患病率更高,尤其是在土著人口中;且存在明显的社会经济差异。相比之下,哥伦比亚的发育迟缓患病率较低,地区差异较小。在所有四个国家中,发育迟缓的社会经济梯度都很明显,最贫困十分位人群的患病率至少是最富裕十分位人群的三倍。
玻利维亚、厄瓜多尔和秘鲁与哥伦比亚的情况形成的鲜明对比,可能是由于影响土著群体的特定种族因素;高原地区特殊的饮食结构,蛋白质和微量营养素摄入量低;以及各国长期经济和社会发展路径的差异。除了所有国家都存在的强烈社会经济梯度外,种族和地区因素的影响表明,有必要减少不平等现象,全面改善教育和住房条件,更精准地实施健康和营养项目,并实施融入土著文化的参与性项目。