Concurrently wasted and stunted children 6-59 months in Karamoja, Uganda: prevalence and case detection

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Concurrently wasted and stunted children 6-59 months in Karamoja, Uganda : prevalence and case detection. / Odei Obeng-Amoako, Gloria Adobea; Myatt, Mark; Conkle, Joel; Muwaga, Brenda Kaijuka; Aryeetey, Richmond; Okwi, Andrew Livex; Okullo, Isaac; Mupere, Ezekiel; Wamani, Henry; Briend, André; Karamagi, Charles Amnon Sunday; Kalyango, Joan Nakayaga.

I: Maternal and Child Nutrition, Bind 16, Nr. 4, e13000, 2020.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Odei Obeng-Amoako, GA, Myatt, M, Conkle, J, Muwaga, BK, Aryeetey, R, Okwi, AL, Okullo, I, Mupere, E, Wamani, H, Briend, A, Karamagi, CAS & Kalyango, JN 2020, 'Concurrently wasted and stunted children 6-59 months in Karamoja, Uganda: prevalence and case detection', Maternal and Child Nutrition, bind 16, nr. 4, e13000. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.13000

APA

Odei Obeng-Amoako, G. A., Myatt, M., Conkle, J., Muwaga, B. K., Aryeetey, R., Okwi, A. L., Okullo, I., Mupere, E., Wamani, H., Briend, A., Karamagi, C. A. S., & Kalyango, J. N. (2020). Concurrently wasted and stunted children 6-59 months in Karamoja, Uganda: prevalence and case detection. Maternal and Child Nutrition, 16(4), [e13000]. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.13000

Vancouver

Odei Obeng-Amoako GA, Myatt M, Conkle J, Muwaga BK, Aryeetey R, Okwi AL o.a. Concurrently wasted and stunted children 6-59 months in Karamoja, Uganda: prevalence and case detection. Maternal and Child Nutrition. 2020;16(4). e13000. https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.13000

Author

Odei Obeng-Amoako, Gloria Adobea ; Myatt, Mark ; Conkle, Joel ; Muwaga, Brenda Kaijuka ; Aryeetey, Richmond ; Okwi, Andrew Livex ; Okullo, Isaac ; Mupere, Ezekiel ; Wamani, Henry ; Briend, André ; Karamagi, Charles Amnon Sunday ; Kalyango, Joan Nakayaga. / Concurrently wasted and stunted children 6-59 months in Karamoja, Uganda : prevalence and case detection. I: Maternal and Child Nutrition. 2020 ; Bind 16, Nr. 4.

Bibtex

@article{4e9ae306904a4a8989a17327d46f45bf,
title = "Concurrently wasted and stunted children 6-59 months in Karamoja, Uganda: prevalence and case detection",
abstract = "We assessed prevalence of concurrently wasted and stunted (WaSt) and explored the overlaps between wasted, stunted, underweight and low mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) among children aged 6-59 months in Karamoja, Uganda. We also determined optimal weight-for-age (WAZ) and MUAC thresholds for detecting WaSt. We conducted secondary data analysis with 2015-2018 Food Security and Nutrition Assessment (FSNA) cross-sectional survey datasets from Karamoja. Wasting, stunting and underweight were defined as <-2.0 z-scores using WHO growth standards. Low MUAC was defined as <12.5 cm. We defined WaSt as concurrent wasting and stunting. Prevalence of WaSt was 4.96% (95% CI [4.64, 5.29]). WaSt was more prevalent in lean than harvest season (5.21% vs. 4.53%; p = .018). About half (53.92%) of WaSt children had low MUAC, and all were underweight. Younger children aged <36 months had more WaSt, particularly males. Males with WaSt had higher median MUAC than females (12.50 vs. 12.10 cm; p < .001). A WAZ <-2.60 threshold detected WaSt with excellent sensitivity (99.02%) and high specificity (90.71%). MUAC threshold <13.20 cm had good sensitivity (81.58%) and moderate specificity (76.15%) to detect WaSt. WaSt prevalence of 5% is a public health concern, given its high mortality risk. All children with WaSt were underweight and half had low MUAC. WAZ and MUAC could be useful tools for detecting WaSt. Prevalence monitoring and prospective studies on WAZ and MUAC cut-offs for WaSt detection are recommended. Future consideration to integrate WAZ into therapeutic feeding programmes is recommended to detect and treat WaSt children.",
keywords = "Faculty of Science, Case detection, Concurrent wasting and stunting, MUAC, Stunting, Uganda, Wasting, WaSt",
author = "{Odei Obeng-Amoako}, {Gloria Adobea} and Mark Myatt and Joel Conkle and Muwaga, {Brenda Kaijuka} and Richmond Aryeetey and Okwi, {Andrew Livex} and Isaac Okullo and Ezekiel Mupere and Henry Wamani and Andr{\'e} Briend and Karamagi, {Charles Amnon Sunday} and Kalyango, {Joan Nakayaga}",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2020 The Authors. Maternal & Child Nutrition published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1111/mcn.13000",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
journal = "Maternal and Child Nutrition",
issn = "1740-8695",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Concurrently wasted and stunted children 6-59 months in Karamoja, Uganda

T2 - prevalence and case detection

AU - Odei Obeng-Amoako, Gloria Adobea

AU - Myatt, Mark

AU - Conkle, Joel

AU - Muwaga, Brenda Kaijuka

AU - Aryeetey, Richmond

AU - Okwi, Andrew Livex

AU - Okullo, Isaac

AU - Mupere, Ezekiel

AU - Wamani, Henry

AU - Briend, André

AU - Karamagi, Charles Amnon Sunday

AU - Kalyango, Joan Nakayaga

N1 - © 2020 The Authors. Maternal & Child Nutrition published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - We assessed prevalence of concurrently wasted and stunted (WaSt) and explored the overlaps between wasted, stunted, underweight and low mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) among children aged 6-59 months in Karamoja, Uganda. We also determined optimal weight-for-age (WAZ) and MUAC thresholds for detecting WaSt. We conducted secondary data analysis with 2015-2018 Food Security and Nutrition Assessment (FSNA) cross-sectional survey datasets from Karamoja. Wasting, stunting and underweight were defined as <-2.0 z-scores using WHO growth standards. Low MUAC was defined as <12.5 cm. We defined WaSt as concurrent wasting and stunting. Prevalence of WaSt was 4.96% (95% CI [4.64, 5.29]). WaSt was more prevalent in lean than harvest season (5.21% vs. 4.53%; p = .018). About half (53.92%) of WaSt children had low MUAC, and all were underweight. Younger children aged <36 months had more WaSt, particularly males. Males with WaSt had higher median MUAC than females (12.50 vs. 12.10 cm; p < .001). A WAZ <-2.60 threshold detected WaSt with excellent sensitivity (99.02%) and high specificity (90.71%). MUAC threshold <13.20 cm had good sensitivity (81.58%) and moderate specificity (76.15%) to detect WaSt. WaSt prevalence of 5% is a public health concern, given its high mortality risk. All children with WaSt were underweight and half had low MUAC. WAZ and MUAC could be useful tools for detecting WaSt. Prevalence monitoring and prospective studies on WAZ and MUAC cut-offs for WaSt detection are recommended. Future consideration to integrate WAZ into therapeutic feeding programmes is recommended to detect and treat WaSt children.

AB - We assessed prevalence of concurrently wasted and stunted (WaSt) and explored the overlaps between wasted, stunted, underweight and low mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC) among children aged 6-59 months in Karamoja, Uganda. We also determined optimal weight-for-age (WAZ) and MUAC thresholds for detecting WaSt. We conducted secondary data analysis with 2015-2018 Food Security and Nutrition Assessment (FSNA) cross-sectional survey datasets from Karamoja. Wasting, stunting and underweight were defined as <-2.0 z-scores using WHO growth standards. Low MUAC was defined as <12.5 cm. We defined WaSt as concurrent wasting and stunting. Prevalence of WaSt was 4.96% (95% CI [4.64, 5.29]). WaSt was more prevalent in lean than harvest season (5.21% vs. 4.53%; p = .018). About half (53.92%) of WaSt children had low MUAC, and all were underweight. Younger children aged <36 months had more WaSt, particularly males. Males with WaSt had higher median MUAC than females (12.50 vs. 12.10 cm; p < .001). A WAZ <-2.60 threshold detected WaSt with excellent sensitivity (99.02%) and high specificity (90.71%). MUAC threshold <13.20 cm had good sensitivity (81.58%) and moderate specificity (76.15%) to detect WaSt. WaSt prevalence of 5% is a public health concern, given its high mortality risk. All children with WaSt were underweight and half had low MUAC. WAZ and MUAC could be useful tools for detecting WaSt. Prevalence monitoring and prospective studies on WAZ and MUAC cut-offs for WaSt detection are recommended. Future consideration to integrate WAZ into therapeutic feeding programmes is recommended to detect and treat WaSt children.

KW - Faculty of Science

KW - Case detection

KW - Concurrent wasting and stunting

KW - MUAC

KW - Stunting

KW - Uganda

KW - Wasting

KW - WaSt

U2 - 10.1111/mcn.13000

DO - 10.1111/mcn.13000

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 32212249

VL - 16

JO - Maternal and Child Nutrition

JF - Maternal and Child Nutrition

SN - 1740-8695

IS - 4

M1 - e13000

ER -

ID: 240790108