Cadernos de Saúde Pública (Sep 2023)

Malnutrition in mother-child dyads in the Brazilian National Survey on Child Nutrition (ENANI-2019)

  • Dayana Rodrigues Farias,
  • Luiz Antonio dos Anjos,
  • Maiara Brusco de Freitas,
  • Talita Lelis Berti,
  • Pedro Gomes Andrade,
  • Nadya Helena Alves-Santos,
  • Maria Alvim Leite,
  • Carlos Eduardo Raymundo,
  • Elisa Maria de Aquino Lacerda,
  • Cristiano Siqueira Boccolini,
  • Inês Rugani Ribeiro de Castro,
  • Gilberto Kac,
  • Letícia B. Vertulli Carneiro,
  • Neilane Bertoni,
  • Paula Normando,
  • Raquel Machado Schincaglia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/0102-311xen085622
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 39, no. suppl 2

Abstract

Read online Read online

Abstract: Malnutrition affects billions of individuals worldwide and represents a global health challenge. This study aimed to determine the prevalence of malnutrition (undernutrition or overweight) among mother-child dyads in children under 5 years old in Brazil in 2019 and to estimate changes in this prevalence from 2006 to 2019. Individual-level data from the Brazilian National Survey on Child Nutrition (ENANI-2019) and the Brazilian National Survey of Demography and Health of Women and Children carried out in 2006 (PNDS 2006) were analyzed. Malnutrition outcomes in mother-child dyads included overweight mother and child, undernourished mother and child, and the double burden of malnutrition, i.e., overweight mother and child having any form of undernourishment (stunting, wasting, or underweight). Prevalence and 95% confidence intervals (95%CI) were estimated. Most women (58.2%) and 9.7% of the children were overweight, 6.9% were stunted, and 3.1% of mothers and 2.9% of the children were underweight. The prevalence of overweight in the mother-child dyad was 7.8% and was statistically higher in Southern Brazil (9.7%; 95%CI: 7.5; 11.9) than in the Central-West (5.4%; 95%CI: 4.3; 6.6). The prevalence of overweight mother and stunted child was 3.5%, with statistically significant difference between the extremes of the mother’s education [0-7 vs. ≥ 12 years, 4.8% (95%CI: 3.2; 6.5) and 2.1%, (95%CI: 1.2; 3.0), respectively]. Overweight in the dyad increased from 5.2% to 7.8%, and the double burden of malnutrition increased from 2.7% to 5.2% since 2006. Malnutrition in Brazilian mother-child dyads seems to be a growing problem, and dyads with lower formal education, higher maternal age, and from the South Region of Brazil were more vulnerable.

Keywords