The 'double burden of malnutrition'
Obesity
is on the rise in Indonesia, one of the largest studies of the double burden of
malnutrition in children has revealed.
Affecting
many low and middle-income countries, the double burden of malnutrition
describes the prevalence of both under nutrition and over nutrition in the same
place at the same time. It can have a devastating impact on individuals and
economies.
The
existence of this growing health problem in Indonesia is confirmed by
researchers led by a PhD candidate from the University of Sydney in a paper
published in PLOS ONE yesterday. Their study is the first of its kind in Asia
and has global implications.
Researchers
drew on a sample of children from the Indonesian Family Life Survey to examine
risk factors for stunting (a sign of chronic under nutrition, which affects
height and brain development), being underweight and obesity.
While the
prevalence of under nutrition in young children decreased over the past 14
years in Indonesia, more children are becoming overweight.
Stunted
or underweight children tended to have a lower birth weight, an underweight or
short parent, and a mother who never received formal education. The likelihood
of being stunted was also higher among children in rural areas.
Meanwhile,
children were more likely to be overweight or obese if they were in the
youngest age group studied (two to 2.9 years), were male, had overweight or
obese parents, and had fathers with high formal education.
In a
paper published in Public Health Nutrition last month, the authors looked at
the children who were both stunted and overweight. Stunted children were
significantly more likely to be overweight than children of a healthy height.
The
research revealed inconsistent trends in the prevalence of being stunted and
overweight, but associated risk factors were being young, being weaned after
the age of six months, having short mothers or living in rural areas.
Lead
author Cut Novianti Rachmi, an Indonesian physician and a PhD candidate in the
Discipline of Child and Adolescent Health at The Children's Hospital at
Westmead Clinical School, said: "The double burden of malnutrition is
complex and wide reaching.
"It
can occur in the same country, city or household -- and also within the same
individual, either at the same time, or during different stages of a person's
life," she explained.
"It's
concerning that stunted children are also most at risk of being overweight or
obese. There are serious potential consequences for their future health -- as
well as the broader financial and societal costs of managing the predicted
associated rise in non-communicable diseases."
"While
a variety of factors could account for the rising levels of obesity in
Indonesia -- including increased national wealth and availability of processed
foods -- more research is required to understand the causes," Dr Rachmi
said.
Other
co-authors, Professor Louise Baur, Professor Mu Li and Dr Kingsley Agho, called
for an overhaul of policy related to these areas.
"There
are major, global policy implications for our findings -- and an urgent need to
modify current interventions and strategies to fit this condition," they
said.
"We
won't adequately tackle the double burden of malnutrition unless under and over
nutrition are dealt with as part of the same problem."
University
of Sydney
No comments:
Post a Comment