Moelyo Annang Giri, Sitaresmi Mei Neni, Julia Madarina
Department of Child Health, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Sebelas Maret/Dr. Moewardi Hospital, Surakarta, Indonesia.
Department of Child Health, Faculty of Medicine, Public Health and Nursing, Universitas Gadjah Mada/Dr. Sardjito Hospital, Yogyakarta, Indonesia.
PLoS One. 2025 Apr 4;20(4):e0290053. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0290053. eCollection 2025.
When referred to the WHO Growth Standards 2006, children in many developing countries showed growth faltering in childhood. A previous study showed that the faltering affected the whole population, not only the disadvantaged ones. We aimed to look for an alternative explanation for this universal decline in length or height-for-age z-scores (HAZ), as lengths/ heights of Indonesian children were compared to the WHO growth standard 2006: Is it a faltering of growth or is it a deceleration toward target height.
We used data on age, gender, height, BMI, parental height and education, household socioeconomic status, and place of residence of children < 5 years old collected by the Indonesia Family Life Survey (IFLS) in 1993, 2000, 2007, and 2014. HAZ was calculated according to the WHO 2006 growth standard. Target heights were calculated from parental heights and converted to target height z-scores (THz). Discrepancies between the two values were used to show the children's growth patterns in relation to their target heights across ages.
The study included 11,241 parent-child pairs from four surveys. At birth, infants were around 1.50 z-scores longer than their THz. However, at two years of age, the discrepancies were almost zero. At 2-5 years old, the discrepancies stayed at the same level. The patterns were similar regardless of the position of the target heights among the height distribution, at the upper or the lower part.
We observed a deceleration toward target height, not growth faltering, in the first two years of life of Indonesian children when the WHO Growth Standard 2006 was used as the reference.
参照世界卫生组织2006年生长标准,许多发展中国家的儿童在童年期出现生长发育迟缓。此前一项研究表明,这种生长发育迟缓影响了全体人群,而非仅仅是弱势群体。我们旨在寻找另一种解释,说明在将印度尼西亚儿童的身高与世界卫生组织2006年生长标准进行比较时,年龄别身高z评分(HAZ)普遍下降的原因:这是生长发育迟缓还是朝着目标身高的减速?
我们使用了印度尼西亚家庭生活调查(IFLS)在1993年、2000年、2007年和2014年收集的有关5岁以下儿童的年龄、性别、身高、体重指数、父母身高和教育程度、家庭社会经济地位以及居住地点的数据。根据世界卫生组织2006年生长标准计算HAZ。根据父母身高计算目标身高,并将其转换为目标身高z评分(THz)。这两个值之间的差异用于显示不同年龄段儿童相对于其目标身高的生长模式。
该研究纳入了来自四项调查的11241对亲子。出生时,婴儿的身高比其THz长约1.50个z评分。然而,到两岁时,差异几乎为零。在2至5岁时,差异保持在同一水平。无论目标身高在身高分布中的位置是在上部还是下部,模式都是相似的。
当以世界卫生组织2006年生长标准为参照时,我们观察到印度尼西亚儿童在生命的头两年是朝着目标身高减速,而非生长发育迟缓。