Mertens, Andrew ; Benjamin-Chung, Jade ; Colford, John M. ; Hubbard, Alan E. ; van der Laan, Mark J. ; Coyle, Jeremy ; Sofrygin, Oleg ; Cai, Wilson ; Jilek, Wendy ; Rosete, Sonali ; Nguyen, Anna ; Pokpongkiat, Nolan N. ; Djajadi, Stephanie ; Seth, Anmol ; Jung, Esther ; Chung, Esther O. ; Malenica, Ivana ; Hejazi, Nima ; Li, Haodong ; Hafen, Ryan ; Subramoney, Vishak ; Häggström, Jonas ; Norman, Thea ; Christian, Parul ; Brown, Kenneth H. ; Arnold, Benjamin F. ; Ahmed, Tahmeed ; Ali, Asad ; Begín, France ; Bessong, Pascal Obong ; Bhutta, Zulfiqar A. ; Black, Robert E. ; Bodhidatta, Ladaporn ; Checkley, William ; Crabtree, Jean E. ; Das, Rina ; Das, Subhasish ; Duggan, Christopher P. ; Faruque, Abu Syed Golam ; Fawzi, Wafaie W. ; da Silva Filho, José Quirino ; Gilman, Robert H. ; Guerrant, Richard L. ; Haque, Rashidul ; Houpt, Eric R. ; Iqbal, Najeeha Talat ; John, Jacob ; John, Sushil Matthew ; Kang, Gagandeep ; Kosek, Margaret ; Lima, Aldo Ângelo Moreira ; Mahopo, Tjale Cloupas ; Manandhar, Dharma S. ; Manji, Karim P. ; Mduma, Estomih ; Mohan, Venkata Raghava ; Moore, Sophie E. ; Nyathi, Mzwakhe Emanuel ; Olortegui, Maribel Paredes ; Petri, William A. ; Premkumar, Prasanna Samuel ; Prentice, Andrew M. ; Rahman, Najeeb ; Sadiq, Kamran ; Sarkar, Rajiv ; Saville, Naomi M. ; Shrestha, Bhim P. ; Shrestha, Sanjaya Kumar ; Sonko, Bakary ; Svensen, Erling ; Syed, Sana ; Umrani, Fayaz ; Ward, Honorine D. ; Yori, Pablo Penataro (2023) Child wasting and concurrent stunting in low- and middle-income countries Nature, 621 (7979). pp. 558-567. ISSN 0028-0836
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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06480-z
Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06480-z
Abstract
Sustainable Development Goal 2.2—to end malnutrition by 2030—includes the elimination of child wasting, defined as a weight-for-length z-score that is more than two standard deviations below the median of the World Health Organization standards for child growth1. Prevailing methods to measure wasting rely on cross-sectional surveys that cannot measure onset, recovery and persistence—key features that inform preventive interventions and estimates of disease burden. Here we analyse 21 longitudinal cohorts and show that wasting is a highly dynamic process of onset and recovery, with incidence peaking between birth and 3 months. Many more children experience an episode of wasting at some point during their first 24 months than prevalent cases at a single point in time suggest. For example, at the age of 24 months, 5.6% of children were wasted, but by the same age (24 months), 29.2% of children had experienced at least one wasting episode and 10.0% had experienced two or more episodes. Children who were wasted before the age of 6 months had a faster recovery and shorter episodes than did children who were wasted at older ages; however, early wasting increased the risk of later growth faltering, including concurrent wasting and stunting (low length-for-age z-score), and thus increased the risk of mortality. In diverse populations with high seasonal rainfall, the population average weight-for-length z-score varied substantially (more than 0.5 z in some cohorts), with the lowest mean z-scores occurring during the rainiest months; this indicates that seasonally targeted interventions could be considered. Our results show the importance of establishing interventions to prevent wasting from birth to the age of 6 months, probably through improved maternal nutrition, to complement current programmes that focus on children aged 6–59 months.
| Item Type: | Article |
|---|---|
| Source: | Copyright of this article belongs to Nature Publishing Group. |
| ID Code: | 141879 |
| Deposited On: | 28 Dec 2025 04:41 |
| Last Modified: | 28 Dec 2025 04:41 |
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