Stunting
Stunting: when?
declining from 1990 to present but still a problem in SSA and parts of Asia
What will not easily reverse stunting?
feeding a stunted child
Stunted mothers are at risk for...
having low brith weigh babies
How is stunting defined?
heigh is more than 2 standard deviations below the median for a child of that age and sex in the healthy reference population
Stunted mothers have higher...
perinatal mortality
indirect causes of stunting
political instability, climate change
Statistics about stunted population
-161 million stunted children in 2013 ->50% in Asia ->33% in SSA
Two arguments for stunting occurring under conditions of undernutrition
-constraint -adaptation
What can stunting do to your body (internally)?
-high glucose concentrations -harmful lipid profiles -diabetes -high blood pressure
argument for adaptation
-natural selection may have produced mechanisms that adjust body size to resource availability -making a child tall may reduce survival when resources are scarce -height is a quantitative trait strongly influenced by environment -natural selection may have designed height to show phenotypic plasticity, which means it responds strongly to the environment
Evolutionary perspective of stunting
-social inequality from selfish pursuit of economic (reproductive) opportunities -adult males control resources/get more protein than women or children -life history trade-offs take resources away from children -polygyny -children < 5 yrs old are vulnerable and powerless
Where is stunting most common?
Sub-saharan Africa and Southeast Asia
How is height measured for children under 2 years old?
by recumbent length
How is height measured for children over 2 years old?
by standing
What does stunting do to cognitive function?
causes poor cognitive function, which means less education, which means less income
What is the effect of undernutrition on brain development?
impaired brain cells
What did Obis and Branca say about stunting?
it is the most prevalent form of child malnutrition
impaired brain cells
limited branching (abnormal, shorter branches)
Prevalence of childhood stunting is an indicator of..
social inequalities
argument for constraint
stunted children have smaller organs
How does stunting lead to limiting economic development?
stunted children have stunted brains and stunted lives
Stunting shortens...
the lifespan
Stunting is passed to...
the next generation
Stunting occurs under conditions of..
undernutrition
Direct causes of stunting
undernutrition, infections that cause poor nutrient intake and absorption, inadequate breastfeeding