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Growth delay: an alternative measure of population health based on child height distributions

Liina Mansukoski, Huma Qamar, Nandita Perumal, Ashley Aimone, Diego G. Bassani, Daniel Roth

2022Annals of Human Biology11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: -scores (HAZ), height-for-age difference (HAD) and stunting prevalence, do not account for differences in population-average bone developmental stage. AIM: Propose a measure of child height that conveys the dependency of linear growth on stage rather than chronological age. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Using Demographic and Health Surveys (2000-2018; 64 countries), we generated: (1) predicted HAZ at specific ages (HAZ regressed on age); (2) height-age (age at which mean height matches the WHO Growth Standards median); (3) Growth delay (GD), the difference between chronological age and height-age; (4) HAD; and (5) stunting prevalence. Metrics were compared based on secular trends within countries and age-related trajectories within surveys. RESULTS: = 64), GDs ranged from 1.9 to 19.1 months at 60 months chronological age. Cross-sectionally, HAZ, HAD and GD were perfectly correlated, and showed similar secular trends. However, age-related trajectories differed across metrics. Accumulating GD with age demonstrated growth faltering as slower than expected growth for children of the same height-age. Resumption of growth at the median for height-age was rarely observed. CONCLUSION: GD is a population-level measure of child health that reflects the role of delayed skeletal development in linear growth faltering.

Topics & Concepts

Secular variationDemographyLinear growthAge groupsPopulationBone ageMedicineHealth statisticsBody heightMathematicsBody weightInternal medicineSociologyApplied mathematicsChild Nutrition and Water AccessBirth, Development, and HealthChild Nutrition and Feeding Issues
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