Njs. Lwambo et al., Age patterns in stunting and anaemia in African schoolchildren: a cross-sectional study in Tanzania, EUR J CL N, 54(1), 2000, pp. 36-40
Objective: To describe the nutritional status of schoolchildren from a rura
l area of Tanzania, with a I,articular emphasis on older adolescents to det
ermine the timing of the growth spurt and differences by sex.
Design: A cross-sectional survey using a randomly selected sample.
Subjects: Six thousand eight hundred and one children aged 7-18 y randomly
selected from those enrolled in standards 2-5 in 59 primary schools in Magu
District, Tanzania.
Results: Overall. 52.5% of children were stunted and 43.0% were underweight
, with significantly more buys stunted and underweight than girls. Z-scores
of height-for-age for both boys and gills decreased progressively between
5 and 12 y. After 12 y the height-for-age z-scores of girls show a marked u
pturn, whilst z-scores for boys continue to decrease throughout the school-
aged years until 16 y when a slight upturn is observed. Anaemia (Hb < 120 g
/L) was present in 62.6% of children. with the prevalence decreasing with a
ge. Anaemia improved throughout the school years for boys, but did nor for
girls. Age, sex and hookworm infection a cre significant predictors of anae
mia.
Conclusion: Stunting and anaemia are exceptionally common conditions in Afr
ican schoolchildren. The findings highlight important differences between b
oys and girls, which are suggestive of compensatory growth at 12 y for girl
s and at 16 y for boys, although it remains unclear whether boys will catch
up in height at older ages.