Department of Health Statistics and Information Systems, WHO, Geneva, Switzerland.
Lancet. 2012 Sep 1;380(9844):824-34. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60647-3. Epub 2012 Jul 5.
There is little information on country trends in the complete distributions of children's anthropometric status, which are needed to assess all levels of mild to severe undernutrition. We aimed to estimate trends in the distributions of children's anthropometric status and assess progress towards the Millennium Development Goal 1 (MDG 1) target of halving the prevalence of weight-for-age Z score (WAZ) below -2 between 1990 and 2015 or reaching a prevalence of 2·3% or lower.
We collated population-representative data on height-for-age Z score (HAZ) and WAZ calculated with the 2006 WHO child growth standards. Our data sources were health and nutrition surveys, summary statistics from the WHO Global Database on Child Growth and Malnutrition, and summary statistics from reports of other national and international agencies. We used a Bayesian hierarchical mixture model to estimate Z-score distributions. We quantified the uncertainty of our estimates, assessed their validity, compared their performance to alternative models, and assessed sensitivity to key modelling choices.
In developing countries, mean HAZ improved from -1·86 (95% uncertainty interval -2·01 to -1·72) in 1985 to -1·16 (-1·29 to -1·04) in 2011; mean WAZ improved from -1·31 (-1·41 to -1·20) to -0·84 (-0·93 to -0·74). Over this period, prevalences of moderate-and-severe stunting declined from 47·2% (44·0 to 50·3) to 29·9% (27·1 to 32·9) and underweight from 30·1% (26·7 to 33·3) to 19·4% (16·5 to 22·2). The largest absolute improvements were in Asia and the largest relative reductions in prevalence in southern and tropical Latin America. Anthropometric status worsened in sub-Saharan Africa until the late 1990s and improved thereafter. In 2011, 314 (296 to 331) million children younger than 5 years were mildly, moderately, or severely stunted and 258 (240 to 274) million were mildly, moderately, or severely underweight. Developing countries as a whole have less than a 5% chance of meeting the MDG 1 target; but 61 of these 141 countries have a 50-100% chance.
Macroeconomic shocks, structural adjustment, and trade policy reforms in the 1980s and 1990s might have been responsible for worsening child nutritional status in sub-Saharan Africa. Further progress in the improvement of children's growth and nutrition needs equitable economic growth and investment in pro-poor food and primary care programmes, especially relevant in the context of the global economic crisis.
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the UK Medical Research Council.
对于评估从轻度到重度营养不良的所有程度,儿童人体测量状况的完整分布方面的信息很少,而这是有必要的。我们旨在评估儿童人体测量状况分布的趋势,并评估在 1990 年至 2015 年期间将体重与年龄 Z 分数(WAZ)低于-2 的患病率减半(千年发展目标 1(MDG 1)的目标)或达到 2.3%或更低的患病率方面取得的进展。
我们整理了身高与年龄 Z 分数(HAZ)和 WAZ 的代表性数据,这些数据是根据 2006 年世卫组织儿童生长标准计算得出的。我们的数据来源包括健康和营养调查、世卫组织全球儿童生长和营养不良数据库的汇总统计数据,以及其他国家和国际机构报告的汇总统计数据。我们使用贝叶斯分层混合模型来估计 Z 分数分布。我们量化了我们估计的不确定性,评估了它们的有效性,将其性能与替代模型进行了比较,并评估了对关键建模选择的敏感性。
在发展中国家,平均 HAZ 从 1985 年的-1.86(95%置信区间-2.01 至-1.72)提高到 2011 年的-1.16(-1.29 至-1.04);平均 WAZ 从-1.31(-1.41 至-1.20)提高到-0.84(-0.93 至-0.74)。在此期间,中度和重度发育迟缓的患病率从 47.2%(44.0 至 50.3)下降到 29.9%(27.1 至 32.9),体重不足从 30.1%(26.7 至 33.3)下降到 19.4%(16.5 至 22.2)。亚洲的绝对改善最大,而在南部和热带拉丁美洲,患病率的相对减少最大。撒哈拉以南非洲的人体测量状况在 20 世纪 90 年代末之前恶化,此后有所改善。2011 年,有 3.14 亿(2.96 亿至 3.31 亿)五岁以下儿童患有轻度、中度或重度发育迟缓,有 2.58 亿(2.40 亿至 2.74 亿)儿童患有轻度、中度或重度体重不足。发展中国家作为一个整体,达到 MDG 1 目标的可能性不到 5%;但在这 141 个国家中,有 61 个国家有 50-100%的机会。
20 世纪 80 年代和 90 年代的宏观经济冲击、结构调整和贸易政策改革可能导致撒哈拉以南非洲儿童营养状况恶化。要进一步改善儿童的生长和营养状况,需要实现公平的经济增长,并投资于有利于穷人的粮食和初级保健方案,这在全球经济危机背景下尤为重要。
比尔及梅琳达·盖茨基金会和英国医学研究理事会。