Haycraft Emma, Chandrasenage Damith, Wambui David, Goudet Sophie, Rousham Emily, Stanley Megan, Murira Zivai, Griffiths Paula
School of Sport, Exercise & Health Sciences, Loughborough University, Loughborough, UK.
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Health, Bureau of Epidemiology, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, USA.
Matern Child Nutr. 2023 Aug 8:e13551. doi: 10.1111/mcn.13551.
Given the recent, rapid urbanisation in Asia and the Pacific region, coupled with increases in the triple burden of malnutrition, we need to better understand maternal, infant and young child nutrition (MIYCN) for populations living in urban slum environments. This research used existing large-scale datasets to explore MIYCN indicators for those living in urban slum, compared with urban nonslum, areas. Data since 2015 from available Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS; Afghanistan, India, Indonesia, Myanmar, Pakistan and the Philippines) and Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS; Bangladesh, Fiji, Kiribati, Mongolia, Nepal, Thailand and Tuvalu) were analysed. Most urban children in the 13 countries from the region were breastfed within 24 h of birth, with slightly higher rates for those living in slums. Conversely, almost all indicators of infant and young child malnutrition were worse for those in urban slums. For mothers living in slums, underweight prevalence and iron deficiency anaemia were higher while maternal overweight and obesity prevalence were lower. Analysis revealed disparities across countries in the wealth status of those living in slum versus nonslum areas. What is currently missing is representative sampling of households, adequate collection of data both within and across countries, and accurate representation of slum-dwellers in large-scale surveys. Given that limited data for the region show urban poor slum populations are vulnerable to poor nutrition indicators, more data are needed on the poorest urban slum populations to enable effective resource allocation to support optimal MIYCN.
鉴于亚洲及太平洋地区近期城市化进程迅速,加之营养不良的三重负担加剧,我们需要更深入地了解生活在城市贫民窟环境中的孕产妇、婴幼儿营养状况。本研究利用现有的大规模数据集,探讨了生活在城市贫民窟地区与非贫民窟地区人群的孕产妇、婴幼儿营养指标。分析了2015年以来来自可用的人口与健康调查(DHS;阿富汗、印度、印度尼西亚、缅甸、巴基斯坦和菲律宾)以及多指标类集调查(MICS;孟加拉国、斐济、基里巴斯、蒙古、尼泊尔、泰国和图瓦卢)的数据。该地区13个国家的大多数城市儿童在出生后24小时内进行了母乳喂养,贫民窟儿童的母乳喂养率略高。相反,城市贫民窟儿童的几乎所有婴幼儿营养不良指标都更差。对于生活在贫民窟的母亲来说,体重不足患病率和缺铁性贫血患病率较高,而孕产妇超重和肥胖患病率较低。分析揭示了贫民窟和非贫民窟地区居民在财富状况方面的国家间差异。目前缺少的是家庭的代表性抽样、国家内部和国家之间的数据充分收集,以及在大规模调查中对贫民窟居民的准确呈现。鉴于该地区有限的数据显示城市贫困贫民窟人口易出现不良营养指标,需要更多关于最贫困城市贫民窟人口的数据,以便有效地分配资源来支持最佳的孕产妇、婴幼儿营养。