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How Can Nutrition Research Better Reflect the Relationship Between Wasting and Stunting in Children? Learnings from the Wasting and Stunting Project

Authors :
Kate Sadler
Philip T James
Zulfiqar A Bhutta
André Briend
Sheila Isanaka
Andrew Mertens
Mark Myatt
Kieran S O’Brien
Patrick Webb
Tanya Khara
Jonathan C Wells
Tampere University
Clinical Medicine
Source :
The Journal of nutrition, vol 152, iss 12, Sadler, K, James, P T, Bhutta, Z A, Briend, A, Isanaka, S, Mertens, A, Myatt, M, O'Brien, K S, Webb, P, Khara, T & Wells, J C 2022, ' How can nutrition research better reflect the relationship between wasting and stunting in children? Learnings from the Wasting and Stunting project ', Journal of Nutrition, vol. 152, no. 12, pp. 2645-2651 . https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/nxac091
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Childhood wasting and stunting affect large numbers of children globally. Both are important risk factors for illness and death yet, despite the fact that these conditions can share common risk factors and are often seen in the same child, they are commonly portrayed as relatively distinct manifestations of undernutrition. In 2014, the Wasting and Stunting project was launched by the Emergency Nutrition Network. Its aim was to better understand the complex relationship and associations between wasting and stunting and examine whether current separations that were apparent in approaches to policy, financing, and programs were justified or useful. Based on the project's work, this article aims to bring a wasting and stunting lens to how research is designed and financed in order for the nutrition community to better understand, prevent, and treat child undernutrition. Discussion of lessons learnt focuses on the synergy and temporal relationships between children's weight loss and linear growth faltering, the proximal and distal factors that drive diverse forms of undernutrition, and identifying and targeting people most at risk. Supporting progress in all these areas requires research collaborations across interest groups that highlight the value of research that moves beyond a focus on single forms of undernutrition, and ensures that there is equal attention given to wasting as to other forms of malnutrition, wherever it is present. publishedVersion

Details

ISSN :
15416100
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of nutrition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bdce3bb94cca8549a66d49c13e697582
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/nxac091