Nutritional problems in children aged 1-24 months: comparison of hill-tribe and Thai children

A cross-sectional survey was conducted in Maecham district, Chiang Mai. The objective was to determine the magnitude of nutritional problems in children aged 1-24 months, both of hill-tribe and Thai communities, where breast-feeding is highly prevalent. Three hundred and fifty nine children were rec...

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Main Authors: Panpanich R., Vitsupakorn K., Chareonporn S.
Format: Comparative Study
Language:English
Published: 2014
Online Access:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3502482
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/3290
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Institution: Chiang Mai University
Language: English
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-32902014-08-30T02:25:58Z Nutritional problems in children aged 1-24 months: comparison of hill-tribe and Thai children Panpanich R. Vitsupakorn K. Chareonporn S. A cross-sectional survey was conducted in Maecham district, Chiang Mai. The objective was to determine the magnitude of nutritional problems in children aged 1-24 months, both of hill-tribe and Thai communities, where breast-feeding is highly prevalent. Three hundred and fifty nine children were recruited, 252 were hill-tribe (Karen and Lahu), and 107 were Thai children. Anthropometric measurements were taken and mothers were interviewed. In a group of hill-tribe children, the prevalence of malnutrition (Z score of weight for age < -2) was 25.0 compared with 12.1 per cent for Thai children (p <0.01). The prevalence was highest in children aged between 12-24 months. This corresponded to the time children were weaned. The prevalence of stunting (Z score of height for age < -2) in hill-tribe and Thai children was 25.4 and 12.1 per cent respectively (p <0.01). There was no significant difference of wasting (Z score of weight for height < -2) between hill-tribe and Thai children, 9.1 and 8.4 per cent respectively. The mean (SD) Z scores of weight for age, weight for height, and height for age for both groups declined significantly as the age increased (p <0.001). In conclusion, this study revealed the nutritional problems of young hill-tribe children were more severe than those of Thai children. The factors that could be related with this, were socioeconomic status, as also genetics, as well as cultural beliefs concerning child raising. Such ethnic minorities therefore should be considered as special cases in programs of health and nutrition promotion. 2014-08-30T02:25:58Z 2014-08-30T02:25:58Z 2000 Comparative Study 0125-2208 11215869 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3502482 http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/3290 eng
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
language English
description A cross-sectional survey was conducted in Maecham district, Chiang Mai. The objective was to determine the magnitude of nutritional problems in children aged 1-24 months, both of hill-tribe and Thai communities, where breast-feeding is highly prevalent. Three hundred and fifty nine children were recruited, 252 were hill-tribe (Karen and Lahu), and 107 were Thai children. Anthropometric measurements were taken and mothers were interviewed. In a group of hill-tribe children, the prevalence of malnutrition (Z score of weight for age < -2) was 25.0 compared with 12.1 per cent for Thai children (p <0.01). The prevalence was highest in children aged between 12-24 months. This corresponded to the time children were weaned. The prevalence of stunting (Z score of height for age < -2) in hill-tribe and Thai children was 25.4 and 12.1 per cent respectively (p <0.01). There was no significant difference of wasting (Z score of weight for height < -2) between hill-tribe and Thai children, 9.1 and 8.4 per cent respectively. The mean (SD) Z scores of weight for age, weight for height, and height for age for both groups declined significantly as the age increased (p <0.001). In conclusion, this study revealed the nutritional problems of young hill-tribe children were more severe than those of Thai children. The factors that could be related with this, were socioeconomic status, as also genetics, as well as cultural beliefs concerning child raising. Such ethnic minorities therefore should be considered as special cases in programs of health and nutrition promotion.
format Comparative Study
author Panpanich R.
Vitsupakorn K.
Chareonporn S.
spellingShingle Panpanich R.
Vitsupakorn K.
Chareonporn S.
Nutritional problems in children aged 1-24 months: comparison of hill-tribe and Thai children
author_facet Panpanich R.
Vitsupakorn K.
Chareonporn S.
author_sort Panpanich R.
title Nutritional problems in children aged 1-24 months: comparison of hill-tribe and Thai children
title_short Nutritional problems in children aged 1-24 months: comparison of hill-tribe and Thai children
title_full Nutritional problems in children aged 1-24 months: comparison of hill-tribe and Thai children
title_fullStr Nutritional problems in children aged 1-24 months: comparison of hill-tribe and Thai children
title_full_unstemmed Nutritional problems in children aged 1-24 months: comparison of hill-tribe and Thai children
title_sort nutritional problems in children aged 1-24 months: comparison of hill-tribe and thai children
publishDate 2014
url http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3502482
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/3290
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