Tumilowicz Alison, Habicht Jean-Pierre, Pelto Gretel, Pelletier David L
Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition, Geneva, Switzerland; and
Division of Nutritional Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2015 Nov;102(5):1249-58. doi: 10.3945/ajcn.114.100776. Epub 2015 Sep 30.
Nearly one-half of Guatemalan children experience growth faltering, more so in indigenous than in nonindigenous children.
On the basis of ethnographic interviews in Totonicapán, Guatemala, which revealed differences in maternal perceptions about food needs in infant girls and boys, we predicted a cumulative sex difference in favor of girls that occurred at ∼6 mo of age and diminished markedly thereafter. We examined whether the predicted differences in age-sex patterns were observed in the village, replicated the examination nationally for indigenous children, and examined whether the pattern in nonindigenous children was different.
Ethnographic interviews (n = 24) in an indigenous village were conducted. Anthropometric measurements of the village children aged 0-35 mo (n = 119) were obtained. National-level growth patterns were analyzed for indigenous (n = 969) and nonindigenous (n = 1374) children aged 0-35 mo with the use of Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data.
Mothers reported that, compared with female infants, male infants were hungrier, were not as satisfied with breastfeeding alone, and required earlier complementary feeding. An anthropometric analysis confirmed the prediction of healthier growth in indigenous girls than in indigenous boys throughout the first year of life, which resulted in a 2.98-cm height-for-age difference (HAD) between sexes in the village and a 1.61-cm HAD (P < 0.001) in the DHS data between 6 and 17 mo of age in favor of girls. In both data sets, the growth sex differences diminished in the second year of life (P < 0.05). No such pattern was seen in nonindigenous children.
We propose that the differences in the HAD that first favor girls and then favor boys in the indigenous growth patterns are due to feeding patterns on the basis of gendered cultural perceptions. Circumstances that result in differential sex growth patterns need to be elucidated, in particular the favorable growth in girls in the first year of life.
危地马拉近一半的儿童生长发育迟缓,其中土著儿童比非土著儿童更为严重。
基于在危地马拉托托尼卡潘进行的人种学访谈,该访谈揭示了母亲对男婴和女婴食物需求的认知差异,我们预测在6个月左右会出现有利于女孩的累积性别差异,此后这种差异会显著减小。我们研究了在这个村庄是否观察到了预测的年龄-性别模式差异,在全国范围内对土著儿童重复进行了该研究,并研究了非土著儿童的模式是否不同。
在一个土著村庄进行了人种学访谈(n = 24)。对0至35个月大的村庄儿童(n = 119)进行了人体测量。利用人口与健康调查(DHS)数据,分析了0至35个月大的土著儿童(n = 969)和非土著儿童(n = 1374)的全国性生长模式。
母亲们报告说,与女婴相比,男婴更饥饿,仅靠母乳喂养不太满足,并且需要更早添加辅食。人体测量分析证实了在生命的第一年,土著女孩的生长比土著男孩更健康的预测,这导致村庄中两性之间的年龄别身高差异(HAD)为2.98厘米,在DHS数据中,6至17个月大时有利于女孩的HAD为1.61厘米(P < 0.001)。在两个数据集中,生长的性别差异在生命的第二年减小(P < 0.05)。在非土著儿童中未观察到这种模式。
我们认为,在土著生长模式中,HAD先有利于女孩,然后有利于男孩的差异是由于基于性别文化认知的喂养模式。需要阐明导致性别生长模式差异的情况,特别是女孩在生命第一年的良好生长情况。