Knowledge Repository
-
BROWSE
-
ICDDR,B PUBLICATIONS
-
CONNECT
Relative effects of diarrhea, fever, and dietary energy intake on weight gain in rural Bangladeshi children
Download
Adobe PDF
(687.62 kB)
Published
1991-06
Author(s)
Becker, Stan
Black, Robert E.
Brown, Kenneth H.
Metadata
Quantitative studies of morbidity, food intake, and somatic growth were done
prospectively during 14 mo for 70 children aged 5-18 mo in two Bangladeshi
villages. When random-effect regression models were used, monthly changes in
weight were inversely related to proportions of days in the month with fever and
diarrhea and positively related to energy intake per kilogram body weight.
Interestingly, weight changes did not vary with age in this interval. Estimates
indicate that increasing energy intakes to the recommended World Health
Organization level would have a significantly greater effect on weight gain than
would the elimination of diarrhea and fever. With energy at recommended intake
and diarrhea and fever prevalence as found in US children, weight gain is
predicted to be near that of the international reference population. Therefore,
interventions aimed at improving dietary intake may be as important as
infection-control programs for improving growth of children in poor developing
nations.
Citation
Am J Clin Nutr 1991 Jun;53(6):1499-503