非洲学龄儿童的较低增长是否对他们目前和未来的健康产生了本质上的损害?

Tropical and geographical medicine Pub Date : 1995-01-01
A R Walker, B F Walker, I I Glatthaar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在非洲和其他第三世界国家,20-50%的学龄儿童低于美国国家卫生统计中心(NCHS)年龄体重和身高生长参考标准的第5百分位。这种生长速度较慢的人通常被归为营养不良、患病风险较高、智力较差和需要补充营养的人。出现的问题包括:“NCHS参考标准的应用是否存在限制?”在非洲学龄儿童中,较低的增长是主要还是部分归因于食物摄入不足?非饮食因素的影响有多大?与健康相关的不利因素是什么?相反,青春期前后较低的生长是否有利于降低随后发生退行性疾病的风险?讨论表明,在整个人体测量学,营养不良及其耻辱,干预,饮食和非饮食,在贫困人口的年轻人中有许多复杂性。鉴于第三世界国家可用的保健资金总是很低,只有证明对学生健康有重要意义的干预措施才值得实施。
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Is the lesser growth of African schoolchildren essentially prejudicial to their present and future health?

In African and other Third World countries, 20-50% of schoolchildren lie under the 5th centile of US National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) growth reference standards for weight- and height-for-age. Such lesser growth, orthodoxly, categorizes those affected as malnourished, at greater risk of disease, of lesser intelligence, and in need of nutritional supplementation. Questions arising include: 'Are there limitations to the application of NCHS reference standards?' In African schoolchildren, is lesser growth attributable largely, or marginally, to insufficient food intake? How powerful are the non-dietary influencing factors? What are the associated disadvantages to health? Conversely, could lesser growth around puberty even be beneficial respecting possible lessening of subsequent risk of degenerative diseases? Discussion indicates that there are numerous complexities in the whole subject of anthropometry, malnutrition and its stigmata, and interventions, dietary and non-dietary, in the youth of poor populations. In view of the invariably low health funds available in Third World countries, only intervention measures of proven significance to pupils' health warrant implementation.

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