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      Regional Variation in the Prevalence of Undernutrition and its Correlates Among Under Five-Year Children in North India

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          Abstract

          Background:

          Undernutrition is an important public health problem affecting one-third of under five-year-old children in India.

          Objectives:

          To assess the nutritional status of under five-year-old children along with child feeding practices.

          Materials and Methods:

          We adopted a systematic sampling procedure to carry out this community-based, cross-sectional study in all the districts of Haryana. Data was collected on socioeconomic and demographic particulars along with anthropometric measurements. Analysis was done using SPSS Windows 23.

          Results:

          The overall prevalence of stunting, underweight, and wasting was 34%, 27.5%, and 11%, while that of severe undernutrition was 11%, 8%, and 3%, respectively. The odds of underweight were significantly higher among children of the Muslim religion, children of scheduled caste, children of illiterate mothers, lower per capita income, HHs without electricity, landless HHs, low birth weight, no ANC care, and those early ages at complementary feeding. Stunting was significantly higher among children whose mothers were illiterate, children whose fathers were laborers, among landless HHs, with no separate kitchen and lower birth weight, while wasting was higher among children of Muslim religion, children of scheduled caste, with no sanitary latrine facility, low-birth-weight children and early initiation of complementary feeding.

          Conclusions:

          Undernutrition is observed to be associated with religion, community, education of mother, per capita income, land holding status, birth weight, and age at complementary feeding. Thus, improving maternal nutrition can improve birth weight, improving maternal knowledge about child feeding, and the household’s socio-economic status may improve the nutritional status of children.

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          Most cited references22

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          Maternal and child undernutrition and overweight in low-income and middle-income countries

          The Lancet, 382(9890), 427-451
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            Maternal and child undernutrition: global and regional exposures and health consequences.

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              Global, regional, and national causes of child mortality in 2000-13, with projections to inform post-2015 priorities: an updated systematic analysis.

              Trend data for causes of child death are crucial to inform priorities for improving child survival by and beyond 2015. We report child mortality by cause estimates in 2000-13, and cause-specific mortality scenarios to 2030 and 2035. We estimated the distributions of causes of child mortality separately for neonates and children aged 1-59 months. To generate cause-specific mortality fractions, we included new vital registration and verbal autopsy data. We used vital registration data in countries with adequate registration systems. We applied vital registration-based multicause models for countries with low under-5 mortality but inadequate vital registration, and updated verbal autopsy-based multicause models for high mortality countries. We used updated numbers of child deaths to derive numbers of deaths by causes. We applied two scenarios to derive cause-specific mortality in 2030 and 2035. Of the 6·3 million children who died before age 5 years in 2013, 51·8% (3·257 million) died of infectious causes and 44% (2·761 million) died in the neonatal period. The three leading causes are preterm birth complications (0·965 million [15·4%, uncertainty range (UR) 9·8-24·5]; UR 0·615-1·537 million), pneumonia (0·935 million [14·9%, 13·0-16·8]; 0·817-1·057 million), and intrapartum-related complications (0·662 million [10·5%, 6·7-16·8]; 0·421-1·054 million). Reductions in pneumonia, diarrhoea, and measles collectively were responsible for half of the 3·6 million fewer deaths recorded in 2013 versus 2000. Causes with the slowest progress were congenital, preterm, neonatal sepsis, injury, and other causes. If present trends continue, 4·4 million children younger than 5 years will still die in 2030. Furthermore, sub-Saharan Africa will have 33% of the births and 60% of the deaths in 2030, compared with 25% and 50% in 2013, respectively. Our projection results provide concrete examples of how the distribution of child causes of deaths could look in 15-20 years to inform priority setting in the post-2015 era. More evidence is needed about shifts in timing, causes, and places of under-5 deaths to inform child survival agendas by and beyond 2015, to end preventable child deaths in a generation, and to count and account for every newborn and every child. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Indian J Community Med
                Indian J Community Med
                IJCM
                Indian J Community Med
                Indian Journal of Community Medicine: Official Publication of Indian Association of Preventive & Social Medicine
                Wolters Kluwer - Medknow (India )
                0970-0218
                1998-3581
                Mar-Apr 2024
                07 March 2024
                : 49
                : 2
                : 322-333
                Affiliations
                [1]Division of Public Health Nutrition, ICMR-National Institute of Nutrition, Hyderabad, Telangana, India
                Author notes
                Address for correspondence: Dr. Indrapal Ishwar Meshram, Division of Public Health Nutrition, ICMR-National Institute of Nutrition, Jamai-Osmania (PO), Tarnaka, Hyderabad - 500007, Telangana, India. E-mail: indrapal2405@ 123456gmail.com
                Article
                IJCM-49-322
                10.4103/ijcm.ijcm_616_22
                11042149
                38665453
                83a5a62d-d909-4152-83c7-c6220fa79bff
                Copyright: © 2024 Indian Journal of Community Medicine

                This is an open access journal, and articles are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as appropriate credit is given and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.

                History
                : 15 July 2022
                : 02 November 2023
                Categories
                Original Article

                Public health
                conceptual framework,iycf,nutritional status,stunting,underweight,wasting
                Public health
                conceptual framework, iycf, nutritional status, stunting, underweight, wasting

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