Abstract
Infant malnutrition constitutes a serious health problem, affecting the most disadvantaged social sectors. Malnutrition causes a decrease in growth and school performance, an alteration in the biochemical state and an increase in infant morbidity and mortality. Among the main causes of malnutrition are an inadequate diet, the presence of infections that interfere with the adequate use of nutrients, inequity, and insufficient food availability. In Latin America, approximately 2.3 million children aged 0 to 4 are affected by moderate or severe malnutrition and 8.8 million are short for their age, with a high prevalence of chronic malnutrition, which is attributable to social determinants economic, economic and health policies in most countries of the region. In Ecuador there is a prevalence of malnutrition of 23.2%, a situation that worsens in the rural context, presenting more frequency in the Sierra (32%), the Coast (15.7%), the Amazon (22.7%) and the Insular zone (5.8%), and even when nutrition programs have been implemented, the positive achievements of nutritional indicators have not had a sufficient impact on some indigenous communities in which a rate of chronic child malnutrition is estimated by above 50%. This research shows the main features of child malnutrition in Ecuador, starting from a qualitative, interpretive design and documentary analysis with the aim of systematizing knowledge and strengthening the theoretical-methodological bases of plans and strategies necessary to reduce the negative effects of the malnutrition in child development.
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Moncayo, M. F. C., Padilla, C. A. P., Argilagos, M. R., & Caicedo, R. G. (2021, December 1). Child malnutrition in Ecuador. A literature review. Boletin de Malariologia y Salud Ambiental. Instituto de Altos Estudios de Salud Publica. https://doi.org/10.52808/BMSA.7E5.614.003
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