Author | Géa-Horta, Tatiane | |
Author | Silva, Rita de Cássia Ribeiro | |
Author | Fiaccone, Rosemeire Leovigildo | |
Author | Barreto, Maurício Lima | |
Author | Meléndez, Gustavo Velásquez | |
Access date | 2017-04-06T17:27:23Z | |
Available date | 2017-04-06T17:27:23Z | |
Document date | 2016 | |
Citation | GÉA-HORTA, T. et al. Factors associated with nutritional outcomes in the mother-child dyad: a population-based cross-sectional study. Public Health Nutrition, v. 19, n. 15, p. 2725–2733, 2016. | pt_BR |
ISSN | 1368-9800 | pt_BR |
URI | https://www.arca.fiocruz.br/handle/icict/18303 | |
Description | "Documento produzido em parceria ou por autor vinculado à Fiocruz, mas não consta à informação no documento". | pt_BR |
Sponsorship | Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES), Brazil and would also like to thank the Brazilian National Council of Research and Technology (CNPq) for a scholarship that supported a fellowship at the Federal University of Bahia, Brazil | pt_BR |
Language | eng | pt_BR |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press | pt_BR |
Rights | open access | pt_BR |
Subject in Portuguese | Avaliação nutricional | pt_BR |
Subject in Portuguese | Sobrepeso | pt_BR |
Subject in Portuguese | Epidemiologia | pt_BR |
Subject in Portuguese | Crescimento infantil | pt_BR |
Subject in Portuguese | Mulheres | pt_BR |
Title | Factors associated with nutritional outcomes in the mother-child dyad: a population-based cross-sectional study | pt_BR |
Type | Article | pt_BR |
DOI | 10.1017/S136898001600080X | |
Abstract | To estimate factors associated with double burden of nutritional outcomes in the mother-child dyad at the household level (child stunting and/or maternal overweight). Design: Cross-sectional study using the Brazilian Demographic and Health Survey.
Nutritional outcomes were: mother with normal weight and child with normal
height; overweight mother and child with normal height; mother with normal
weight and short-stature child; and overweight mother and child with short stature
(double burden). The child was classified as short when height-for-age Z-score
was <−2 and the mother as overweight when BMI was ≥25·00 kg/m2.
Socio-economic status, environment, social vulnerability, maternal characteristics
and the child’s food intake were the exposure factors. The hierarchical approach
for multinomial logistic regression modelling was used to assess the associations.
Setting: National Demographic and Health Survey of Children and Women
conducted in Brazil, 2006–2007.
Subjects: Mother–child dyads (n 3676).
Results: After adjustments, lower maternal educational level (OR=3·53; 95% CI
1·33, 9·33) and inadequate household (non-masonry house; OR=2·54; 95% CI
1·39, 4·66) were associated with the double burden of malnutrition. Mother’s short
stature (OR=3·41; 95% CI 1·76, 6·61), child’s vegetable intake on less than or
equal to 4 d/week (OR=2·21; 95% CI 1·03, 4·75) and inadequate household
(non-masonry house; OR=2·29; 95% CI 1·36, 3·87) were associated with child’s
short stature. The lack of breast-feeding (OR=2·00; 95% CI 1·07, 3·72) was
associated with maternal overweight.
Conclusions: The present findings contribute to establishing strategies promoting
health and healthy diets, by considering the growth deficit and overweight/obesity
concomitantly. | pt_BR |
Affilliation | Federal University of Minas Gerais. Department of Maternal Infant and Public Health. School of Nursing. BeloHorizonte, MG, Brasil | pt_BR |
Affilliation | Federal University of Bahia. Nutrition School. Nutrition Science Department. Salvador, BA, Brasil | pt_BR |
Affilliation | Federal University of Bahia. Institute of Mathematics. Salvador, BA, Brasil | pt_BR |
Affilliation | Federal University of Bahia. Institute of Public Health. Salvador, BA, Brasil | pt_BR |
Affilliation | Federal University of Minas Gerais. Department of Maternal Infant and Public Health. School of Nursing. BeloHorizonte, MG, Brasil | pt_BR |
Subject | Nutritional assessment | pt_BR |
Subject | Overweight | pt_BR |
Subject | Epidemiology | pt_BR |
Subject | Child growth | pt_BR |
Subject | Women | pt_BR |