Abstract

Childhood malnutrition is associated with high morbidity and mortality globally1. Undernourished children are more likely to experience cognitive, physical, and metabolic developmental impairments that can lead to later cardiovascular disease, reduced intellectual ability and school attainment, and reduced economic productivity in adulthood2. Child growth failure (CGF), expressed as stunting, wasting, and underweight in children under five years of age (0–59 months), is a specific subset of undernutrition characterized by insufficient height or weight against age-specific growth reference standards3–5. The prevalence of stunting, wasting, or underweight in children under five is the proportion of children with a height-for-age, weight-for-height, or weight-for-age z-score, respectively, that is more than two standard deviations below the World Health Organization’s median growth reference standards for a healthy population6. Subnational estimates of CGF report substantial heterogeneity within countries, but are available primarily at the first administrative level (for example, states or provinces)7; the uneven geographical distribution of CGF has motivated further calls for assessments that can match the local scale of many public health programmes8. Building from our previous work mapping CGF in Africa9, here we provide the first, to our knowledge, mapped high-spatial-resolution estimates of CGF indicators from 2000 to 2017 across 105 low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), where 99% of affected children live1, aggregated to policy-relevant first and second (for example, districts or counties) administrative-level units and national levels. Despite remarkable declines over the study period, many LMICs remain far from the ambitious World Health Organization Global Nutrition Targets to reduce stunting by 40% and wasting to less than 5% by 2025. Large disparities in prevalence and progress exist across and within countries; our maps identify high-prevalence areas even within nations otherwise succeeding in reducing overall CGF prevalence. By highlighting where the highest-need populations reside, these geospatial estimates can support policy-makers in planning interventions that are adapted locally and in efficiently directing resources towards reducing CGF and its health implications.

Highlights

  • Even within the aforementioned regions where reductions were most evident, local-level estimates revealed communities in which levels still approached those seen in SSA and South Asia; areas in southern Mexico and central Ecuador had estimated stunting prevalence of at least 40%, and areas in western Mongolia reached at least 30%

  • Interactive visualization tools are available at https://vizhub.healthdata.org/lbd/cgf

  • Critical wasting prevalence was concentrated in few areas across the globe in 2017, including the peri-Sahelian areas of countries stretching from Mauritania to Sudan, as well as areas in South Sudan, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, Yemen, India, Pakistan, Bhutan, and Indonesia

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Summary

Discussion

Commendable declines in CGF have occurred globally, this progress measured at a coarse scale conceals subnational and local underachievement and variation in achieving the WHO GNTs.

Methods
Limitations
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Code availability

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