MRC Unit The Gambia at London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Atlantic Boulevard, Fajara, Banjul, The Gambia.
Regional Activity Centre for Sustainable Consumption and Production (SCP/RAC), Sant Pau Art Nouveau Site, Carrer Sant Antoni Maria Claret, 167, 08025, Barcelona, Spain.
BMC Med. 2018 Nov 1;16(1):199. doi: 10.1186/s12916-018-1179-3.
Childhood malnutrition remains highly prevalent in low-income countries, and a 40% reduction in under-5 year stunting is WHO's top Global Target 2025. Disappointingly, meta-analyses of intensive nutrition interventions reveal that they generally have low efficacy at improving growth. Unhygienic environments also contribute to growth failure, but large WASH Benefits and SHINE trials of improved water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) recently reported no benefits to child growth.
To explore the thresholds of socio-economic status (SES) and living standards associated with malnutrition, we exploited a natural experiment in which the location of our research centre within a remote rural village created a wide diversity of wealth, education and housing conditions within the same ecological setting and with free health services to all. A composite SES score was generated by grading occupation, education, income, water and sanitation, and housing and families were allocated to 5 groups (SES1 = highest). SES ranged from very poor subsistence-farming villagers to post graduate staff with overseas training. Nutritional status at 24 m was obtained from clinic records for 230 children and expressed relative to WHO Growth Standards.
Height-for-age (HAZ) and weight-for-age (WAZ) Z-scores were strongly predicted by SES group. HAZ varied from - 0.67 to - 2.23 (P < 0.001) and WAZ varied from - 0.90 to - 1.64 (P < 0.001), from SES1 to SES5, respectively. Weight-for-height (WHZ) showed no gradient. Children in SES1 showed greater dispersion so were further divided in a post hoc analysis. Children resident in Western housing on the research compound (SES1A) had HAZ = + 0.68 and WAZ = + 0.36. The residual gradient between those in SES1B and SES5 spanned only 0.65 Z-score for HAZ (- 1.58 to - 2.23) and was not significant for WAZ or WHZ.
The large difference in growth between children in SES1A living in Western-type housing and SES1B children living in the village, and the very shallow gradient between SES1B and SES5, implies a very high SES threshold before stunting and underweight will be eliminated. This may help to explain the lack of efficacy of the recent WASH interventions and points to the need for what is termed 'Transformative WASH'. Good quality housing, with piped water into the home, may be key to eliminating malnutrition.
儿童营养不良在低收入国家仍然普遍存在,世卫组织的 2025 年全球目标是将五岁以下儿童发育迟缓率降低 40%。令人失望的是,密集营养干预措施的荟萃分析表明,它们在改善生长方面的效果通常较低。不卫生的环境也会导致生长失败,但最近关于改善水、环境卫生和个人卫生(WASH)的大型 WASH 效益和 SHINE 试验报告称,对儿童生长没有益处。
为了探索与营养不良相关的社会经济地位(SES)和生活水平的阈值,我们利用了一个自然实验,我们的研究中心位于一个偏远的农村,在同一生态环境中创造了广泛的财富、教育和住房条件多样性,并为所有人提供免费的医疗服务。通过对职业、教育、收入、水和卫生以及住房和家庭进行评分,生成了一个综合 SES 评分,家庭被分配到 5 个组(SES1=最高)。SES 从以务农为生的非常贫困的村民到拥有海外培训的研究生员工不等。230 名儿童的 24 个月时的营养状况从诊所记录中获得,并根据世卫组织生长标准表示为相对值。
身高年龄(HAZ)和体重年龄(WAZ)Z 分数与 SES 组密切相关。HAZ 从 SES1 到 SES5 分别为 -0.67 到 -2.23(P<0.001),WAZ 从 -0.90 到 -1.64(P<0.001)。WHZ 没有梯度。SES1 组的儿童分布更为分散,因此在事后分析中进一步进行了细分。居住在研究场地上的西式住房中的 SES1A 儿童的 HAZ=+0.68 和 WAZ=+0.36。SES1B 和 SES5 之间的剩余梯度仅跨越 HAZ 0.65 Z 分数(-1.58 至-2.23),WAZ 或 WHZ 没有显著差异。
SES1A 中居住在西式住房中的儿童和 SES1B 中居住在村庄中的儿童之间在生长方面存在很大差异,SES1B 和 SES5 之间的梯度非常浅,这意味着在出现发育迟缓症和体重不足之前,SES 阈值非常高。这可能有助于解释最近 WASH 干预措施效果不佳的原因,并指出需要所谓的“变革性 WASH”。优质住房,包括家庭内的自来水供应,可能是消除营养不良的关键。