
HEALTH
Growth trends in first 1,000 days of child’s life can influence their future growth, studies examine such trends
- Admin
- Sep 14, 2023

Growth trends in first 1,000 days of child’s life can influence their future growth, studies examine such trends
Wasting and stunted growth trends seen in the first 1,000 days of a child’s life can influence their future growth and health, according to studies newly published in Nature journal’s Progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) Collection.
Informing ourselves of these trends is imperative to addressing growth faltering in children, along with understanding the populations and age groups that need the most attention, said the authors of these studies pertaining to SDG 2, which is “Zero Hunger”.
The studies present longitudinal, or long-term, analyses of 33 previously published studies by analysing data from overall 80,000 children from across South Asia, sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America.
The Collection marks the mid-point of the 15-year period envisioned by the United Nations to achieve the SDGs by 2030, Nature’s press statement said.
The first study, from Stanford University, found that the onset of stunted-growth was most prevalent within the first three months after a child’s birth, with South Asia seeing substantially higher stunting at birth. Jade Benjamin-Chung and colleagues analysed data of 52,640 children in this study.
During these three months, wasting was seen to “peak”, the second study, from the University of California (UC) Berkeley, found.
Nearly 30 per cent of the children studied lost fat and muscle tissue in the first 2 years of life and 10 per cent experienced two or more episodes of wasting, Andrew Mertens from UC Berkeley and team found after studying child wasting in a subset of 11,448 children.
Faltering in growth in the first 6 months of life was found to lay the ground for subsequent and persistent growth faltering in these children, found the third study, also by Mertens and team, adding that boys had a higher risk of growth faltering than girls. The study evaluated the potential causes and consequences of child growth failure in 83,671 children.
SDG 2.2 calls for the elimination of malnutrition by 2030, with child wasting as its primary indicator. Our results elevate the importance of improving at-birth child outcomes, with a focus on both maternal support during pregnancy and nutritional supplementation in food-insecure populations for women of child-bearing age, pregnant women and children under 24 months, Mertens and team wrote in their study analysing child wasting trends.