Assessment Of Nutritional Status (With Who Reference Standards) And Health Status Among Rural Primary School Children of Anand District, Gujarat
Keywords:
Nutritional status, rural primary school children, BMI for age, height for age, Anand District, WHO reference standardsAbstract
Background: Health and Nutritional status school age children of 5-19 years of age are not focused as much as under 5 in India. School age is the foundation of active and productive life for an individual.
Methodology: A cross sectional study was done among the enrolled school children (STD 1-7) of a government rural primary school of a village of Anand district, Gujarat. Trained teachers of the school were engaged in measuring height and weights in a standardized way. Measures like BMI for age and Height for age were compared with the WHO growth standards (2007).
Results: Among a total of 291 school children (161 boys and 130 girls), for many age groups, more than 80% of children of the groups, were falling below median-2SD of the WHO standards, both for BMI for age and height for age. This was seen more among boys than for girls. The overall prevalence of anemia was 29.20%.
Conclusion: Majority of rural primary school children, suffer from significant level of inadequate growth, in terms of body mass and stature. Due to variations in social and economic conditions, the health and nutrition status should be focused for school aged children through more stringent efforts.
References
Pal D, Kanungo S, Bal B, Bhowmik K, Mahapatra T, Malnutrition Scenario among School Children in Eastern-India-an Epidemiological Study, Epidemiology (Sunnyvale), 2016; 6:228.
UNICEF: United Nations International Children’s’ Fund, Story on Nutrition, 2016; New York : accessed from http://unicef.in/Story/1124/Nutrition on 10/12/2016.
International Institute of Population Sciences (IIPS) Na-tional Family Health Survey (NFHS-3), Fact sheets for 29 States. Mumbai: International Institute for Population Sciences India; Mumbai; 2007.
Ananthakrishnan S., Pani S.P., Nalini P., A Comprehen-sive Study of Morbidity in School Age Children, Indian Pediatrics, 2001; 38: 1009-1017.
UNICEF, United Nations International Children’s’ Fund, Nutrition, Fact file, 2007; New York: Accessed from www.unicef.org/india
International Institute of Population Sciences (IIPS) Na-tional Family Health Survey (NFHS-3), Fact sheets for 29 States, Mumbai, 2007; 1-51.
Best C, Neufingerl N, Van Geel L, Briel T.V.D, Osendarp S. The nutritional status of school going children: Why should we care? Food Nutr Bull, 2010; 31 (3): 400-417.
WHO-World Health Organization, Reference values for BMI and Height for age (z-scores) for 5-19 years children, Geneva, 2007. Accessed from www.who.int/growthref/en.
Meshram II, Arlappa N, Balakrishna N, Mallikharjuna-Rao K, Laxmaiah A, et al., Trends in the prevalence of undernutrition, nutrient and food intake and predictors of undernutrition among under five year tribal children in India. Asia Pac J ClinNutr, 2012; 21: 568-576.
Meshram II, Laxmaiah A, Gal Reddy Ch, Ravindranath M, Venkaiah K, et al., Prevalence of under-nutrition and its correlates among under 3 year-old children in rural ar-eas of Andhra Pradesh, India. Ann Hum Biol, 2011; 38: 93-101.
Onis M, Growth curves for school aged children and ado-lescents, Indian Pediatrics, 2009; 46: 463-465.
Srivastava A, Mahmood S.,Srivastava P M, Shrotriya V P & Kumar B, Nutritional status of school-age children - A scenario of urban slums in India, Arch Public Health. 2012; 70(1): 8. PMCID: PMC3436633.
Shahabuddin A. et al. Adolescent nutrition in a rural community in Bangladesh. Indian J Pediatr.2000; 67(2):93–98.
The anthropometric status of school children in five coun-tries in the Partnership for Child Development. Partner-ship for Child Development, Proc Nutr Soc. 1998; 57:149–158.
Chesire E. J., Orago A., Oteba L. P., Echoka E., Determi-nants Of Under Nutrition Among School Age Children In A Nairobi Peri-Urban Slum, East African medical jour-nal, 2008; 85(10):471-9.
Cynthia S. S., Nutritional Status of Government Primary School Children in an Urban Slum, Kurnool, Andhra Pra-desh. International Journal of Current Medical And Ap-plied Sciences, 2015; 6(3), 167-170.
Sengupta P, Philip N, Benjamin A, Epidemiological corre-lates of under-nutrition in under-5 year’s children in an urban slum of Ludhiana. Health and Population: Per-spectives and Issues, 2010; 33: 1-9.
Deb S, Dutta S, Dasgupta A, Misra R, Relationship of personal hygiene with nutrition and morbidity profile: a study among primary school children in South Kolkata, Indian Journal of Community Medicine, 2010; 35: 280-284.
Panda P, Benjamin AI, Zachariah P. Growth and morbid-ity patterns among rural school children in Ludhiana, Punjab. Health Popul Perspect Issues. 1997; 20(1):20–28.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
The authors retain the copyright of their article, with first publication rights granted to Medsci Publications.