Comparison of estimates of malnutrition in children aged 0–5 years between clinic-based nutrition surveillance and national surveys
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Date
2011-05-12Author
Nnyepi, M.
Gobotswang, K.S.M.
Codjia, P.
Publisher
Macmillan, www.palgrave-journals.com/jphp/Type
Published ArticleMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This study documents a marked discrepancy between the nutritional
status of children aged 0–5 years in Botswana when measured by national
surveys compared to clinic-based surveillance. We compared the average
prevalence of underweight (weight-for-age z-scores below 2 standard deviations of the mean of the Center for Disease Control (CDC)/WHO reference standards) in children 0–5 years of age. According to clinic surveillance, prevalence of
underweight has fallen from 14.670.03 to 3.570.04 per cent between 1993 and
2010. In national surveys, it had fallen from 14.670.01 to 11.570.01 per cent
between 1993 and 2007. We explored several possibilities to explain this
discrepancy, and conclude that it is because of sampling bias in the clinic
surveillance. This finding underlines the need for properly conducted surveys to ensure accurate information about the nutritional status of children.