Risk or associated factors of wasting among under-five children in Bangladesh: A systematic review

Asia Pac J Clin Nutr. 2024 Dec;33(4):457-480. doi: 10.6133/apjcn.202412_33(4).0001.

Abstract

Background and objectives: Wasting among under-five years old (U-5) children is a significant global public-health-nutrition burden. To effectively address this problem in Bangladesh, knowing its prevalence, caus-es and associated-factors are essential. This review aimed to identify evidences available in the existing-accessible literature/documents that describe the individual, socioeconomic, demographic, and contextual risk-factors associated with wasting among U-5 children in Bangladesh.

Methods and study design: Electronic-databases included were MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, WoS, and Cochrane-Library written in English and published until 29 February 2024.

Results: The search from the five databases yielded 167 publications. Of these, 50 papers/articles were duplicates and 108 were irrelevant, and nine have met the inclusion criteria. Additionally, 22 articles/documents were identified from other sources. Finally, a total of 31 articles/documents have been included in this review. The odds of childhood wasting observed were high for smaller birth-size, higher birth-order, male child, 12-24 months age-group, improper breastfeeding- and complementary-feeding practices, not-receiving DPT1 and/or measles vaccine, ≥1 sibling(s), maternal-undernutrition, less food-consumption during pregnancy, lack of maternal-education, lack of hand-washing practices by the mother/caregiver, paternal tobacco use, lower socioeconomic-status, food-insecurity, lack of access to hygienic-latrine and/or improved-water, Monsoon season (May-August), flood exposure, living es-pecially in Barishal, Rajshahi Chittagong and Rangpur-division and/or Eastern part of Bangladesh, and urban-slum.

Conclusions: The risk/associated factors of wasting among U-5 children in Bangladesh were found at various multilevel. Rarely caused by any one factor alone, wasting in U-5 children results from an interplay between pregnant-mother's health and nutrition, child-caring practices, diets, poverty, and disease, which vary by context.

Keywords: Bangladesh; associated factors; risk factors; under-five children; wasting.

Publication types

  • Systematic Review

MeSH terms

  • Bangladesh / epidemiology
  • Child, Preschool
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Male
  • Risk Factors
  • Socioeconomic Factors
  • Wasting Syndrome* / epidemiology

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