Abstract

ObjectiveTo assess whether the observed prevalence of the double burden of malnutrition (DBM) would be higher than expected on the basis of chance, through analyses at national, wealth quintile and individual child levels.DesignWe selected nationally representative surveys from low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) carried out since 2005 with anthropometric measures on children under 5 years of age. Household wealth was assessed through asset indices. The expected prevalence of DBM was estimated by multiplying the prevalence of stunting (low height/length for age) and overweight (high weight for height/length). The WHO recommended cut-offs (20% for stunting and 10% for overweight) that were used to define DBM at national level. DBM at individual level was defined as co-occurrence of stunting and overweight in the same child.SettingNationally representative surveys from ninety-three LMIC.ParticipantsA total of 825 633 children were studied.ResultsDBM at national level was observed in five countries, whereas it would be expected to occur in eleven countries. Six countries did not present evidence of DBM at national level but did so in at least one wealth quintile. At individual level, thirty countries (32·3%) showed higher prevalence of DBM than would be expected, but most differences were small except for Syria, Azerbaijan, Albania and Egypt.ConclusionsThe observed number of countries or socio-economic subgroups within countries with the DBM using recommended thresholds was below what would be expected by chance. However, individual-level analyses showed that one-third of countries presented higher prevalence of DBM than would be expected.

Highlights

  • Still in the country-level analyses, stunting prevalence was inversely and moderately correlated with overweight prevalence, at national level for all ninety-three countries, but this association was driven by lower-middle-income countries, where the number of stunted children dropped rapidly and that of overweight children increased markedly from 2000 to 2017(15)

  • We found a single study that attempted to identify low- and middleincome countries (LMIC) where the double burden of malnutrition (DBM) was present among children under 5 years of age at national level, rather than at individual level

  • National prevalence of the DBM at individual level ranged from 0·2% to 10·9%, which is consistent with the literature[13,32,33,34] and consistent with the overall estimate 2·0% from the Global School-Based Student Health and Health Behavior in School-Aged Children surveys conducted in fifty-seven LMIC[35]

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Summary

Introduction

Data analyses Descriptive analyses include estimates of the DBM at individual level and of the prevalence of stunting and overweight at national level and for wealth quintiles. For individual-level analyses, the observed estimates of the DBM were compared with the expected probabilities of children presenting both stunting and overweight due to chance (assuming that the two conditions were independent from one another) using the formula: PðDBMÞ 1⁄4 PðstuntingÞ Â PðoverweightÞ: The variance for the expected DBM prevalence was calculated as follows: varDBM 1⁄4 varstunting  varoverweight þ varstunting

Results
Conclusion
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