Dual burden of malnutrition in US Affiliated Pacific jurisdictions in the Children’s Healthy Living Program

Abstract Background Few data are available on dual burden of under and over nutrition of children in the Pacific region. The objective was to examine prevalence of stunting at birth and current stunting and their relationship to obesity in US Affiliated Pacific (USAP) jurisdictions. Methods Cross se...

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Main Authors: Rachel Novotny, Fenfang Li, Rachael Leon Guerrero, Patricia Coleman, Aifili J. Tufa, Andrea Bersamin, Jonathan Deenik, Lynne R Wilkens
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-05-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-017-4377-6
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spelling doaj-83dab067d31444f795bd63372c4ac6e02020-11-24T22:20:15ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582017-05-011711710.1186/s12889-017-4377-6Dual burden of malnutrition in US Affiliated Pacific jurisdictions in the Children’s Healthy Living ProgramRachel Novotny0Fenfang Li1Rachael Leon Guerrero2Patricia Coleman3Aifili J. Tufa4Andrea Bersamin5Jonathan Deenik6Lynne R Wilkens7University of HawaiiUniversity of HawaiiUniversity of GuamNutrition & Health ProgramsUniversity of HawaiiUniversity of AlaskaUniversity of HawaiiUniversity of HawaiiAbstract Background Few data are available on dual burden of under and over nutrition of children in the Pacific region. The objective was to examine prevalence of stunting at birth and current stunting and their relationship to obesity in US Affiliated Pacific (USAP) jurisdictions. Methods Cross sectional survey with cluster sampling by community. 5558, 2–8 years olds were measured in 51 communities in 11 USAP jurisdictions. The main outcome measures were stunting at birth, current stunting and obesity by body mass index. Prevalences of stunting at birth, current stunting and obesity were determined, adjusting for age distribution and community clustering. Differences by among age, sex, race and jurisdiction income levels were evaluated by chi-square analysis. Relationships of stunting at birth and current stunting with obesity were examined using a hierarchical model accounting for the study design. Results Prevalences were stunting at birth 6.8% (Standard Error, SE = 0.9%), current stunting 1.4% (SE = 0.2%) and obesity 14.03.8% (SE = 0.9%). Obesity was highest in upper middle income jurisdictions (UMIJ) at 17.5%. Stunting at birth differed by race (p = 0.0001) with highest prevalence among Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islanders (10.7%). Prevalence of stunting at birth was different by jurisdiction income level with 27.5% in lower middle income jurisdictions (LMIJ), and 22.2% in UMIJ, and 5.5% in higher than high income jurisdictions (HIJ) at 5.5% (p < 0.0001). Prevalence of current stunting was higher in LMIJ than HIJ (p = 0.001), although children with current stunting were less likely to have been stunted at birth. The association between stunting at birth and current stunting was negative (OR = 0.19, 95% CI: 0.05–0.69). Conclusions Currently stunted children were marginally less likely to be obese than not stunted children in the USAP, where the prevalence of current stunting is low. Stunting (at birth and current) was highest in LMIJ, while UMIJ jurisdictions had the highest dual burden of malnutrition (that is the highest combination of both stunting at birth and obesity). Trial registration National Institutes for Health clinical trial # NCT01881373 (clinicaltrials.gov).http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-017-4377-6PacificRaceIncomeObesityStuntingCountry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rachel Novotny
Fenfang Li
Rachael Leon Guerrero
Patricia Coleman
Aifili J. Tufa
Andrea Bersamin
Jonathan Deenik
Lynne R Wilkens
spellingShingle Rachel Novotny
Fenfang Li
Rachael Leon Guerrero
Patricia Coleman
Aifili J. Tufa
Andrea Bersamin
Jonathan Deenik
Lynne R Wilkens
Dual burden of malnutrition in US Affiliated Pacific jurisdictions in the Children’s Healthy Living Program
BMC Public Health
Pacific
Race
Income
Obesity
Stunting
Country
author_facet Rachel Novotny
Fenfang Li
Rachael Leon Guerrero
Patricia Coleman
Aifili J. Tufa
Andrea Bersamin
Jonathan Deenik
Lynne R Wilkens
author_sort Rachel Novotny
title Dual burden of malnutrition in US Affiliated Pacific jurisdictions in the Children’s Healthy Living Program
title_short Dual burden of malnutrition in US Affiliated Pacific jurisdictions in the Children’s Healthy Living Program
title_full Dual burden of malnutrition in US Affiliated Pacific jurisdictions in the Children’s Healthy Living Program
title_fullStr Dual burden of malnutrition in US Affiliated Pacific jurisdictions in the Children’s Healthy Living Program
title_full_unstemmed Dual burden of malnutrition in US Affiliated Pacific jurisdictions in the Children’s Healthy Living Program
title_sort dual burden of malnutrition in us affiliated pacific jurisdictions in the children’s healthy living program
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2017-05-01
description Abstract Background Few data are available on dual burden of under and over nutrition of children in the Pacific region. The objective was to examine prevalence of stunting at birth and current stunting and their relationship to obesity in US Affiliated Pacific (USAP) jurisdictions. Methods Cross sectional survey with cluster sampling by community. 5558, 2–8 years olds were measured in 51 communities in 11 USAP jurisdictions. The main outcome measures were stunting at birth, current stunting and obesity by body mass index. Prevalences of stunting at birth, current stunting and obesity were determined, adjusting for age distribution and community clustering. Differences by among age, sex, race and jurisdiction income levels were evaluated by chi-square analysis. Relationships of stunting at birth and current stunting with obesity were examined using a hierarchical model accounting for the study design. Results Prevalences were stunting at birth 6.8% (Standard Error, SE = 0.9%), current stunting 1.4% (SE = 0.2%) and obesity 14.03.8% (SE = 0.9%). Obesity was highest in upper middle income jurisdictions (UMIJ) at 17.5%. Stunting at birth differed by race (p = 0.0001) with highest prevalence among Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islanders (10.7%). Prevalence of stunting at birth was different by jurisdiction income level with 27.5% in lower middle income jurisdictions (LMIJ), and 22.2% in UMIJ, and 5.5% in higher than high income jurisdictions (HIJ) at 5.5% (p < 0.0001). Prevalence of current stunting was higher in LMIJ than HIJ (p = 0.001), although children with current stunting were less likely to have been stunted at birth. The association between stunting at birth and current stunting was negative (OR = 0.19, 95% CI: 0.05–0.69). Conclusions Currently stunted children were marginally less likely to be obese than not stunted children in the USAP, where the prevalence of current stunting is low. Stunting (at birth and current) was highest in LMIJ, while UMIJ jurisdictions had the highest dual burden of malnutrition (that is the highest combination of both stunting at birth and obesity). Trial registration National Institutes for Health clinical trial # NCT01881373 (clinicaltrials.gov).
topic Pacific
Race
Income
Obesity
Stunting
Country
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-017-4377-6
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