Underdiagnosis of malnutrition in infants and young children in Rwanda: implications for attainment of the Millennium Development Goal to end poverty and hunger |
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Authors: | Agnès Binagwaho Mawuena Agbonyitor Alphonse Rukundo Niloo Ratnayake Fidel Ngabo Josephine Kayumba Bridget Dowdle Elena Chopyak Mary C Smith Fawzi |
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Affiliation: | (1) Government of Rwanda, Ministry of Health, P.O. Box 3622, Kigali, Rwanda;(2) National University of Rwanda, P.O. Box, 56, Butare, Rwanda;(3) Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, 641 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA 02115, USA;(4) Government of Rwanda, Ministry of Health, Malaria Unit/TRAC Plus, P.O. Box 2717, Kigali, Rwanda;(5) Health Sciences Center, School of Medicine, University of Virginia, P.O. Box 800793, Charlottesville, VA, USA;(6) Government of Rwanda, Treatment and Research AIDS Center (TRAC), P.O. Box 2717, Kigali, Rwanda;(7) Partners In Health, 888 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, MA 02215, USA |
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Abstract: | Progress towards the first Millennium Development Goal (MDG1) to end poverty and hunger has lagged behind attainment of other MDGs due to chronic poverty and worldwide inequity in access to adequate health care, food, clean water, and sanitation. Despite ongoing challenges, Rwanda has experienced economic progress and the expansion of the national public health system during the past 20 years. However, protein-energy malnutrition in children under five is still a major concern for physicians and government officials in Rwanda. Approximately 45% of children under the age of five in Rwanda suffer from chronic malnutrition, and one in four is undernourished. For years, health facilities in Rwanda have used incorrect growth references for measuring nutritional status of children despite the adoption of new standards by the World Health Organization in 2006. Under incorrect growth references used in Rwanda, a number of children under five who were severely underweight were not identified, and therefore were not treated for malnutrition, thus potentially contributing to the under five mortality rate. Given that one in ten children suffer from malnutrition worldwide, it is imperative that all countries with a burden of malnutrition adopt the most up-to-date international standards for measuring malnutrition, and that the problem is brought to the forefront of international public health initiatives. For low income countries in the process of improving economic conditions, as Rwanda is, increasing the identification and treatment of malnutrition can promote the advancement of MDG1 as well as physical and cognitive development in children, which is imperative for advancing future economic progress. |
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