Attenzione: i dati modificati non sono ancora stati salvati. Per confermare inserimenti o cancellazioni di voci è necessario confermare con il tasto SALVA/INSERISCI in fondo alla pagina
IRIS
Background: Child growth failure (CGF), which includes underweight, wasting, and stunting, is among the factors most strongly associated with mortality and morbidity in children younger than 5 years worldwide. Poor height and bodyweight gain arise from a variety of biological and sociodemographic factors and are associated with increased vulnerability to infectious diseases. We used data from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) 2023 to estimate CGF prevalence, the risk of infectious diseases associated with CGF, and the disease mortality, morbidity, and overall burden associated with CGF. Methods: In this analysis we estimated the all-cause and cause-specific (diarrhoea, lower respiratory tract infections, malaria, and measles) disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) lost and mortality associated with stunting, wasting, underweight, and CGF in aggregate. We combined the burden associated with mild, moderate, and severe forms of CGF: stunting was defined as height-for-age Z scores (HAZ) less than –1, underweight was defined as weight-for-age Z scores (WAZ) less than –1, and wasting was defined as weight-for-height Z scores (WHZ) less than –1, according to WHO Child Growth Standards. Population-level continuous distributions of HAZ, WAZ, and WHZ were estimated for 2000 to 2023 using data from surveys, literature, and individual-level study data. The risk of incidence of, and mortality due to, diarrhoea, lower respiratory infections, malaria, and measles was separately estimated in a meta-regression framework from longitudinal cohort data for Z scores less than –1. Finally, fatal outcomes associated with these diseases were estimated with vital registration, verbal autopsy, and case-fatality data, while non-fatal outcomes were estimated with surveys as well as health-care utilisation and case reporting data. The exposure prevalence and relative risk estimates were from continuous distributions, allowing for direct assessment of the attributable fractions for mild, moderate, and severe stunting, underweight, wasting, and the combined impact of child growth failure within populations. All estimates were age-specific, sex-specific, geography-specific, and year-specific. Findings: We estimated that, in children younger than 5 years in 2023, CGF was associated with 79·4 million (95% uncertainty interval [UI] 47·0–106) DALYs lost and 880 000 (517 000–1 170 000) deaths. This represented 17·9% (10·6–23·8) of 444 million (434–457) total under-5 DALYs and 18·8% (11·1–25·0) of all 4·67 million (4·59–4·75) under-5 deaths. Compared to stunting (33·0 million [24·1–42·2] DALYs, 373 000 [272 000–477 000] deaths) and wasting (39·2 million [23·8–53·0] DALYs, 428 000 [256 000–583 000] deaths), childhood underweight was associated with the largest share of CGF-related disease burden: 52·2 million (21·9–75·1) DALYs and 573 000 (236 000–824 000) deaths in children younger than 5 years in 2023. Interpretation: CGF remains a leading factor associated with death and disability in children younger than 5 years, despite global attention and focused interventions to reduce the prevalence of associated CGF indicators. Our findings underscore the need for policies, strategies, and interventions that focus on all indicators of CGF to reduce its associated health burden. Funding: Gates Foundation.
Quantifying the fatal and non-fatal burden of disease associated with child growth failure, 2000–2023: a systematic analysis from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2023
Troeger, Christopher E;Arndt, Michael Benjamin;Aalruz, Hasan;Abdoun, Meriem;Abdullahi, Auwal;Abebe, Mesfin;Abedi, Armita;Abie, Alemwork;Aboagye, Richard Gyan;Abolhassani, Hassan;Abtew, Yonas Derso;Abu-Zaid, Ahmed;Adamu, Lawan Hassan;Adane, Mesafint Molla;Addo, Isaac Yeboah;Adegboye, Oyelola A;Adekanmbi, Victor;Adetunji, Juliana Bunmi;Adnani, Qorinah Estiningtyas Sakilah;Adzigbli, Leticia Akua;Afzal, Muhammad Sohail;Afzal, Saira;Aggarwal, Navidha;Ahmad, Aqeel;Ahmad, Muayyad M;Ahmad, Sajjad;Ahmadi, Elham;Ahmed, Ayman;Ahmed, Haroon;Ahmed, Mehrunnisha Sharif;Ahmed, Mushood;Ajami, Marjan;Aji, Budi;Al Hasan, Syed Mahfuz;Al Omari, Omar;Alam, Mohammad Khursheed;Albashtawy, Mohammed;Alemnew, Fentahun;Al-Eyadhy, Ayman;Ali, Mohammed Usman;Ali, Rafat;Ali, Syed Shujait;Ali, Waad;Almazan, Joseph Uy;Al-Mekhlafi, Hesham M;Alsabri, Mohammed A;Alshahrani, Najim Z.;Altaf, Awais;Alvis-Guzman, Nelson;Al-Wardat, Mohammad;Aly, Hany;Amugsi, Dickson A;Anil, Abhishek;Anteneh, Zelalem Alamrew;Anuoluwa, Boluwatife Stephen;Anvari, Saeid;Anyasodor, Anayochukwu Edward;Arabloo, Jalal;Aravkin, Aleksandr Y;Areda, Demelash;Arooj, Mahwish;Artamonov, Anton A;Arumugam, Ashokan;Aryntayeva, Nurila;Asiamah-Asare, Bernard Kwadwo Yeboah;Athari, Seyyed Shamsadin;Atout, Maha Moh'd Wahbi;Aweke, Amlaku Mulat;Awotidebe, Adedapo Wasiu;Ayenew, Asteray Assmie;Azanaw, Melkalem Mamuye;Aziz, Shahkaar;Babu, Giridhara Rathnaiah;Bai, Ruhai;Baker, Jennifer L;Balcha, Wondu Feyisa;Banik, Palash Chandra;Bardhan, Mainak;Barrow, Amadou;Bashir, Shahid;Basiru, Afisu;Bassat, Quique;Bastan, Mohammad-Mahdi;Behera, Priyamadhaba;Bell, Michelle L;Bemanalizadeh, Maryam;Bhadoria, Ajeet Singh;Bhaskar, Sonu;Bhattacharjee, Priyadarshini;Bhatti, Jasvinder Singh;Bisignano, Catherine;Biswas, Bijit;Bodhare, Trupti;Bolla, Srinivasa Rao;Boppana, Sri Harsha;Capodici, Angelo;Chandika, Rama Mohan;Chattu, Vijay Kumar;Chaudhary, Anis Ahmad;Chekole, Moges Sisay;Chen, Hana;Cho, Daniel Youngwhan;Choudhari, Sonali Gajanan;Chukwu, Isaac Sunday;Chung, Erin;Cruz-Martins, Natalia;da Silva, Alanna Gomes;Dahiru, Tukur;Dai, Xiaochen;Dandona, Lalit;Dandona, Rakhi;Darcho, Samuel Demissie;Darwish, Amira Hamed;De la Hoz, Fernando Pio;Denova-Gutiérrez, Edgar;Devanbu, Vinoth Gnana Chellaiyan;Devegowda, Devananda;Dima, Adriana;Do, Thanh Chi;Dowou, Robert Kokou;Dy, Angel Belle Cheng;El Bayoumy, Ibrahim Farahat;Eldegwi, Marwa;Elhadi, Muhammed;Elilo, Legesse Tesfaye;El Sayed, Iman;Fasanmi, Abidemi Omolara;Figueiredo, Marta;Fischer, Florian;Fomenkov, Artem Alekseevich;Fraij, Amin;Gebremedhin, Amanuel Tesfay;Getacher, Lemma;Getahun, Genanew K;Gholamalizadeh, Maryam;Gilbertson, Nora M;Girmay, Alem Abera;Golechha, Mahaveer;Gonzalez-Castell, Dinorah;Grivna, Michal;Guan, Shi-Yang;Gubari, Mohammed Ibrahim Mohialdeen;Gunawardane, Damitha Asanga;Guo, Zhifeng;Gupta, Bhawna;Gupta, Rajat Das;Haile, Demewoz;Hamdy, Nadia M;Handal, Alexis J;Hanifi, Nasrin;Hareru, Habtamu Endashaw;Has, Eka Mishbahatul Marah;Hasaballah, Ahmed I;Hassan, Ikrama;Hay, Simon I;Hayat, Khezar;He, Jiawei;Heibati, Behzad;Heuer, Austin;Hezam, Kamal;Holla, Ramesh;Hossain, Md Sabbir;Hosseinzadeh, Hassan;Hostiuc, Sorin;Huda, Tanvir M;Hussain, Javid;Hussein, Dursa;Huynh, Hong-Han;Hwang, Bing-Fang;Ibitoye, Segun Emmanuel;Immurana, Mustapha;Iskander, Teresa R;Islam, Md Rabiul;Islam, Md Sahidul;Islam, Sheikh Mohammed Shariful;Jacob, Louis;Jakovljevic, Mihajlo;Jayaram, Shubha;Jayatilleke, Achala Upendra;Jin, Wenyi;Joseph, Alex;Joseph, Nitin;Kabir, Ali;Kadashetti, Vidya;Kadir, Dler H. Hussein;Kalra, Sanjay;Kamireddy, Arun;Kanmodi, Kehinde Kazeem;Kantar, Rami S;Kashoo, Faizan Zaffar;Kayode, Gbenga A;Kedir, Shemsu;Keflie, Tibebeselassie S;Khan, Ajmal;Khan, Maseer;Khanal, Vishnu;Khanmohammadi, Shaghayegh;Khatab, Khaled;Khatatbeh, Moawiah Mohammad;Khatib, Mahalaqua Nazli;Khidri, Feriha Fatima;Kim, Kwanghyun;Kim, Min Seo;Kisa, Adnan;Kompani, Farzad;Koomson, Isaac;Krishan, Kewal;Kulimbet, Mukhtar;Kumar, Dewesh;Kumar, G Anil;Kumar, Nithin;Kumar, Vijay;Kurmanova, Almagul;Kurniasari, Maria Dyah;Kusuma, Dian;Lahariya, Chandrakant;Latief, Kamaluddin;Le, Minh Huu Nhat;Le, Nhi Huu Hanh;Lee, Sang-woong;Lee, Seung Won;Lee, Yo Han;Ligade, Virendra S;Lim, Stephen S;Lin, Jialing;Liu, Jue;Liu, Xuefeng;Lodha, Rakesh;López-Gil, José Francisco;Lourembam, Surbala Devi;Ma, Zheng Feei;Mabrok, Mahmoud;Malhotra, Kashish;Malik, Ahmad Azam;Mansouri, Vahid;Manu, Emmanuel;Marzan, Melvin Barrientos;Marzo, Roy Rillera;Marzouk, Sammer;Mathur, Medha;Mattiello, Rita;Mediratta, Rishi P;Mehboob, Riffat;Mehta, Kala M;Mekene Meto, Tesfahun;Mestrovic, Tomislav;Mettananda, Sachith;Miazgowski, Tomasz;Minervini, Giuseppe;Mirghafourvand, Mojgan;Mirica, Andreea;Mohamed, Jama;Mohamed, Nouh Saad;Mohammad-Alizadeh-Charandabi, Sakineh;Mohammadian-Hafshejani, Abdollah;Mohammed, Shafiu;Mokdad, Ali H;Monasta, Lorenzo;Moni, Mohammad Ali;Mubarik, Sumaira;Mukherjee, Sumoni;Mulatu, Sileshi;Mulita, Francesk;Murray, Christopher J L;Mustafa, Ghulam;Nafei, Ayoub;Naik, Ganesh R;Natto, Zuhair S;Nauman, Javaid;Navaratna, Samidi Nirasha Kumari;Nayak, Biswa Prakash;Nega, Amanuel Tebabal;Nepal, Samata;Netsere, Henok Biresaw;Nguefack-Tsague, Georges;Nguyen, Dang;Nguyen, The Phuong;Niazi, Robina Khan;Nikoobar, Ali;Nnyanzi, Lawrence Achilles;Nomura, Shuhei;Nouri, Mehran;Nri-Ezedi, Chisom Adaobi;Nurrika, Dieta;Nyadanu, Sylvester Dodzi;Nzoputam, Chimezie Igwegbe;Nzoputam, Ogochukwu Janet;Odetokun, Ismail A;Okati-Aliabad, Hassan;Okekunle, Akinkunmi Paul;Okonji, Osaretin Christabel;Olusanya, Bolajoko Olubukunola;Olusanya, Jacob Olusegun;Osuagwu, Uchechukwu Levi;Ouyahia, Amel;P, Mahesh;Padubidri, Jagadish Rao;Pantea Stoian, Anca;Parikh, Romil R;Patel, Jay;Patil, Shankargouda;Pawar, Shrikant;Pereira, Gavin;Perianayagam, Arokiasamy;Petermann-Rocha, Fanny Emily;Pham, Hoang Nhat;Pham, Hoang Tran;Phan, My Kieu;Pradhan, Jalandhar;Pradhan, Pranil Man Singh;Prashant, Akila;Puvvula, Jagadeesh;Qattea, Ibrahim;Raghav, Pankaja;Rahman, Md. Mosfequr;Rahman, Mosiur;Rahman, Muhammad Aziz;Rahmani, Amir Masoud;Rahmati, Masoud;Rai, Rajesh Kumar;Raimondo, Ivano;Rajaa, Sathish;Rajabi, Rayan;Ramadan, Mahmoud Mohammed;Ramasamy, Chitra;Ramasamy, Shakthi Kumaran;Ranabhat, Chhabi Lal;Rao, Chythra R;Rao, Sowmya J;Rasella, Davide;Rashid, Mamunur;Rathish, Devarajan;Rauniyar, Santosh Kumar;Rawaf, David Laith;Rawaf, Salman;Rezaei, Nazila;Rezaeian, Mohsen;Rodrigues da Silva, Thales Philipe;Rodriguez, Jefferson Antonio Buendia;Rohloff, Peter;Romadlon, Debby Syahru;Roy, Bedanta;Roy, Shubhanjali;Sabet, Cameron John;Sadarangani, Kabir P;Saddik, Basema Ahmad;Saeed, Umar;Saghazadeh, Amene;Sagoe, Dominic;Saheb Sharif-Askari, Narjes;Sahebkar, Amirhossein;Sahoo, Pragyan Monalisa;Samodra, Yoseph Leonardo;Samy, Abdallah M;Sanjeev, Rama Krishna;Sankararaman, Senthilkumar;Santric-Milicevic, Milena M;Sarfo, Jacob Owusu;Sarikhani, Yaser;Sarkar, Tanmay;Sarode, Gargi Sachin;Sarode, Sachin C;Sartorius, Benn;Saulam, Jennifer;Sawhney, Monika;Saya, Ganesh Kumar;Schinckus, Christophe;Schuermans, Art;Sendekie, Ashenafi Kibret;Senthilkumaran, Subramanian;Sethi, Yashendra;Seylani, Allen;Shaharudin, Shazlin;Shahid, Samiah;Shaikh, Masood Ali;Sham, Sunder;Shamim, Muhammad Aaqib;Shanawaz, Mohd;Shannawaz, Mohammed;Sharew, Nigussie Tadesse;Sharma, Vishal;Shetty, Pavanchand H;Shittu, Aminu;Shiue, Ivy;Shorofi, Seyed Afshin;Siddig, Emmanuel Edwar;Sikdar, Mithun;Silva, Luís Manuel Lopes Rodrigues;Singh, Harmanjit;Singh, Jasvinder A;Singh, Kalpana;Singh, Surjit;Solanki, Shipra;Soni, Mansi;Sorensen, Reed J D;Suleman, Muhammad;Sulistiyorini, Desy;Swain, Chandan Kumar;Tabatabaei, Seyyed Mohammad;Tabatabaeizadeh, Seyed-Amir;Tabish, Mohammad;Tamuzi, Jacques Lukenze;Taye, Birhan Tsegaw;Teklehaimanot, Wegayehu Zeneb;Tekola, Abainash;Temsah, Mohamad-Hani;Thapar, Rekha;Ticoalu, Jansje Henny Vera;Tiruye, Tenaw Yimer;Titova, Mariya Vladimirovna;Tomo, Sojit;Tovani-Palone, Marcos Roberto;Tran, Quynh Thuy Huong;Tran, Thang Huu;Tran Minh Duc, Nguyen;Tsatsakis, Aristidis;Tualeka, Abdul Rohim;Ullah, Saeed;Ullah, Shahid;Umair, Muhammad;Unnikrishnan, Bhaskaran;Upadhyay, Era;Usman, Jibrin Sammani;Van den Eynde, Jef;Vaziri, Siavash;Vellingiri, Balachandar;Vlassov, Vasily;Wagaw, Gebeyaw Biset;Wang, Yanzhong;Wu, Felicia;Xiao, Hong;Yadav, Vikas;Yahya, Galal;Yon, Dong Keon;Yonemoto, Naohiro;Yu, Chuanhua;Zaman, Sojib Bin;Zare, Iman;Zastrozhin, Michael;Zeariya, Mohammed G M;Zebari, Salih M Mustafa Salih;Zhong, Claire Chenwen;Kassebaum, Nicholas J;Reiner, Robert C
2026
Abstract
Background: Child growth failure (CGF), which includes underweight, wasting, and stunting, is among the factors most strongly associated with mortality and morbidity in children younger than 5 years worldwide. Poor height and bodyweight gain arise from a variety of biological and sociodemographic factors and are associated with increased vulnerability to infectious diseases. We used data from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) 2023 to estimate CGF prevalence, the risk of infectious diseases associated with CGF, and the disease mortality, morbidity, and overall burden associated with CGF. Methods: In this analysis we estimated the all-cause and cause-specific (diarrhoea, lower respiratory tract infections, malaria, and measles) disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) lost and mortality associated with stunting, wasting, underweight, and CGF in aggregate. We combined the burden associated with mild, moderate, and severe forms of CGF: stunting was defined as height-for-age Z scores (HAZ) less than –1, underweight was defined as weight-for-age Z scores (WAZ) less than –1, and wasting was defined as weight-for-height Z scores (WHZ) less than –1, according to WHO Child Growth Standards. Population-level continuous distributions of HAZ, WAZ, and WHZ were estimated for 2000 to 2023 using data from surveys, literature, and individual-level study data. The risk of incidence of, and mortality due to, diarrhoea, lower respiratory infections, malaria, and measles was separately estimated in a meta-regression framework from longitudinal cohort data for Z scores less than –1. Finally, fatal outcomes associated with these diseases were estimated with vital registration, verbal autopsy, and case-fatality data, while non-fatal outcomes were estimated with surveys as well as health-care utilisation and case reporting data. The exposure prevalence and relative risk estimates were from continuous distributions, allowing for direct assessment of the attributable fractions for mild, moderate, and severe stunting, underweight, wasting, and the combined impact of child growth failure within populations. All estimates were age-specific, sex-specific, geography-specific, and year-specific. Findings: We estimated that, in children younger than 5 years in 2023, CGF was associated with 79·4 million (95% uncertainty interval [UI] 47·0–106) DALYs lost and 880 000 (517 000–1 170 000) deaths. This represented 17·9% (10·6–23·8) of 444 million (434–457) total under-5 DALYs and 18·8% (11·1–25·0) of all 4·67 million (4·59–4·75) under-5 deaths. Compared to stunting (33·0 million [24·1–42·2] DALYs, 373 000 [272 000–477 000] deaths) and wasting (39·2 million [23·8–53·0] DALYs, 428 000 [256 000–583 000] deaths), childhood underweight was associated with the largest share of CGF-related disease burden: 52·2 million (21·9–75·1) DALYs and 573 000 (236 000–824 000) deaths in children younger than 5 years in 2023. Interpretation: CGF remains a leading factor associated with death and disability in children younger than 5 years, despite global attention and focused interventions to reduce the prevalence of associated CGF indicators. Our findings underscore the need for policies, strategies, and interventions that focus on all indicators of CGF to reduce its associated health burden. Funding: Gates Foundation.
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.
Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11591/589192
Citazioni
1
0
ND
social impact
Conferma cancellazione
Sei sicuro che questo prodotto debba essere cancellato?
simulazione ASN
Il report seguente simula gli indicatori relativi alla propria produzione scientifica in relazione alle soglie ASN 2023-2025 del proprio SC/SSD. Si ricorda che il superamento dei valori soglia (almeno 2 su 3) è requisito necessario ma non sufficiente al conseguimento dell'abilitazione. La simulazione si basa sui dati IRIS e sugli indicatori bibliometrici alla data indicata e non tiene conto di eventuali periodi di congedo obbligatorio, che in sede di domanda ASN danno diritto a incrementi percentuali dei valori. La simulazione può differire dall'esito di un’eventuale domanda ASN sia per errori di catalogazione e/o dati mancanti in IRIS, sia per la variabilità dei dati bibliometrici nel tempo. Si consideri che Anvur calcola i valori degli indicatori all'ultima data utile per la presentazione delle domande.
La presente simulazione è stata realizzata sulla base delle specifiche raccolte sul tavolo ER del Focus Group IRIS coordinato dall’Università di Modena e Reggio Emilia e delle regole riportate nel DM 589/2018 e allegata Tabella A. Cineca, l’Università di Modena e Reggio Emilia e il Focus Group IRIS non si assumono alcuna responsabilità in merito all’uso che il diretto interessato o terzi faranno della simulazione. Si specifica inoltre che la simulazione contiene calcoli effettuati con dati e algoritmi di pubblico dominio e deve quindi essere considerata come un mero ausilio al calcolo svolgibile manualmente o con strumenti equivalenti.