Overweight among children decreased, but obesity prevalence remained high among women in South Africa, 1999-2005
Date
2012Author
Kruger, Herculina S.
Steyn, Nelia P.
Swart, Elizabeth C.
Maunder, Eleni M.W.
Nel, Johanna H.
Moeng, Lynn
Labadarios, Demetre
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Objective: The aim of the present study was to assess anthropometric status in
South African children and women in 2005 in order to document temporal trends
in selected anthropometric parameters.
Design: Heights and weights were measured in a cross-sectional study of children
aged 1–9 years and women aged 16–35 years. The WHO reference values and
BMI cut-off points were used to determine weight status.
Setting: South Africa, representative sample based on census data.
Subjects: Children (n 2157) and women (n 2403).
Results: Stunting was the most common nutritional disorder affecting 21?7%
of children in 1999 and 20?7% in 2005. The difference was not statistically
significant. Underweight prevalence remained unchanged, affecting 8?1% of
children, whereas wasting affected 5?8% of children nationally, a significant
increase from 4?3% of children in 1999. Rural children were most severely
affected. According to the international BMI cut-off points for overweight and
obesity, 10% of children nationally were classified as overweight and 4% as
obese. The national prevalence of overweight and obesity combined for women
was 51?5%. The prevalence of overweight in children based on weight-for-height
Z-score did not change significantly (8?0% to 6?8%, P50?138), but the combined
overweight/obesity prevalence based on BMI cut-off points (17?1% to 14?0%,
P50?02) decreased significantly from 1999 to 2005.
Conclusions: The double burden of undernutrition in children and overweight
among women is evident in South Africa and getting worse due to increased
childhood wasting combined with a high prevalence of obesity among urban
women, indicating a need for urgent intervention
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/17474http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=8500938&fulltextType=RA&fileId=S136898001100262X
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S136898001100262X
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- Faculty of Health Sciences [2404]