To examine the prevalence of the double burden of malnutrition and its associated factors among adolescents in rural China.
A birth cohort of adolescents born to women in northwestern China who participated in a double-blind, randomized, controlled trial of micronutrient supplementation during pregnancy from August 2002 to January 2006 was enrolled. Follow-up was conducted from June to December 2016.
A total of 2115 participants were analyzed (median age 12 years; IQR±1), the majority of whom were male (59.7%). The nutritional status distribution was 17.72% underweight, 8.62% overweight, 0.96% obese, and 2.58% stunted. Girls were less likely to be overweight/obese (RRR=0.67, 95% CI= 0.48-0.92) but more likely to be underweight (RRR=1.65, 95% CI=1.25-2.17) or stunted (RRR=2.26, 95% CI=1.21-4.22). Children of underweight mothers (RRR=1.63, 95% CI= 1.19-2.25) with a history of small-for-gestational-age (SGA) (RRR=1.64, 95% CI= 1.14-2.36) or described as being a “picky eater” (RRR=1.53, 95% CI= 1.18-1.99) had a higher risk of being underweight. Children whose fathers’ education was primary or below (RRR=2.25, 95% CI= 1.11-4.59), with maternal height <150.1 cm (RRR=2.46, 95% CI= 1.12-5.39), or who had underweight mothers (RRR=2.80, 95% CI= 1.37-5.72) had a higher likelihood of stunting. Overweight/obesity was associated with high and middle household wealth (RRR=1.62, 95% CI= 1.14-2.32), overweight mothers (RRR=1.86, 95% CI= 1.25-2.78), and picky eating (RRR=0.62, 95% CI= 0.46-0.84).
Malnutrition (undernutrition and overweight/obesity) is common in rural Chinese adolescents and is associated with perinatal, genetic and economic conditions.
Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
About The Expert
Mohamed Elhoumed
Amanuel Kidane Andegiorgish
Qi Qi
Mitslal Abrha Gebremedhin
Liang Wang
Gérard Uwimana
Yue Cheng
Zhonghai Zhu
Lingxia Zeng
References
PubMed