The relationship between residential altitude and stunting: Evidence from >26 000 children living in highlands and lowlands of Ethiopia

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Abstract

Little information is known about the influence of altitude on child growth in Ethiopia, where most people live in highlands. We investigated the relation of residential altitude with growth faltering (stunting) of infants and young children in Ethiopia. We also examined whether the altitude-growth relationship was independent of the influence of the dietary and non-dietary determinants of growth. We used the data of 26 976 under-5-year-old children included in the Ethiopian Demographic and Health Surveys, conducted from 2005 to 2016. The samples were recruited following a two-stage cluster sampling strategy. Stunting was defined by height-for-age < 0·001), irrespective of the dietary and non-dietary predictors of stunting. The prevalence of stunting was lowest in lowlands (39 %) and highest in highlands (47 %). Compared with altitude <1000 masl, the odds of stunting was 1·41 times higher at altitude ≥2500 masl (OR 1·41, 95 % CI 1·16, 1·71) and 1·29 times higher at altitude 2000-2499 masl (OR 1·29, 95 % CI 1·11, 1·49). Children living in highlands might be at a higher risk of poor growth. Further studies are warranted to understand the mechanism behind the observed altitude-stunting link and identify strategies to compensate for the growth-faltering effect of living in highlands.

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Mohammed, S. H., Habtewold, T. D., Abdi, D. D., Alizadeh, S., Larijani, B., & Esmaillzadeh, A. (2020). The relationship between residential altitude and stunting: Evidence from >26 000 children living in highlands and lowlands of Ethiopia. British Journal of Nutrition, 123(8), 934–941. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114519003453

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