Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T15:13:42.088Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A longitudinal study of child growth in a rural community in Jamaica

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 July 2008

K. L. Standard
Affiliation:
Medical Research Council's Epidemiological Research Unit, University of the West Indies, Kingston 7, Jamaica
Patricia Desai
Affiliation:
Medical Research Council's Epidemiological Research Unit, University of the West Indies, Kingston 7, Jamaica
W. E. Miall
Affiliation:
Medical Research Council's Epidemiological Research Unit, University of the West Indies, Kingston 7, Jamaica

Summary

A longitudinal study of the growth of a cohort of 229 infants born in a rural area in Jamaica and followed to their 4th birthdays is described, and this paper reports analyses of the anthropometric measurements.

Moderate impairment of growth affected the majority of children and was most marked between the ages of 3 and 15 months. Severe impairment occurred in boys more often than girls and in this comm unity was rarely attributable to disease.

The concept of weight faltering has been investigated in some detail; failure to gain weight for a period of 6 months occurred in almost half the children but was not, by itself, a useful prognostic index of malnutrition; it occurred commonly in children of above average weight whose subsequent growth was normal.

The provision of intensive care at specially appointed child welfare clinics did not completely prevent the development of serious malnutrition.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1969

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ashcroft, M.T., Bell, R., Nicholson, C.C. & Pemberton, S. (1968) Growth of Guyanese infants of African and East Indian racial origins with some observations on mortality. Trans. R. Soc. trop. Med. Hyg. 62, 607.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashcroft, M.T., Buchanan, I.C., Lovell, H.G. & Welsh, B. (1966) Growth of infants and pre-schoolchildren in St. Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla, West Indies. Amer. J. clin. Nutr. 19, 37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashcroft, M.T., Heneage, P. & Lovell, H.G. (1966) Heights and weights of Jamaican school-children of various ethnic groups. Am. J. phys. Anthrop. 24, 35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashcroft, M.T., Ling, J., Lovell, H.G. & Miall, W.E. (1966) Heights and weights of adults in rural and urban areas of Jamaica. Br. J. prev. soc. Med. 20, 22.Google Scholar
Ashcroft, M.T. & Lovell, H.G. (1966) Heights and weights of Jamaican primary schoolchildren. J. trop. Paediat. 12, 37.Google ScholarPubMed
Ashcroft, M.T., Lovell, H.G., George, M. & Williams, A. (1965) Heights and weights of infants and children in a rural community of Jamaica. J. trop. Paediat. 11, 56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Billewicz, W.Z. (1967) A note on body weight measurements and seasonal variation. Hum. Biol. 39, 241.Google Scholar
Cravioto, J., De Licardie, E.R. & Birch, H.G. (1966) Nutrition, growth and neurointegrative development: an experimental and ecologic study. Pediatrics, 38, (Suppl.), 319.Google Scholar
Desai, P., Standard, K.L. & Miall, W.E. (1970) Socio-economic and cultural influences on child growth—an epidemiological study in rural Jamaica. J. biosoc. Sci.(in press).Google Scholar
Falkner, F., Pernot-Roy, M.P., Harbich, H., Senecal, J. & Massie, G. (1958) Some international comparisons of physical growth in the first two years of life. Courr. Cent. int. Ent. 8, 1.Google Scholar
Harfouche, J.K. (1966) Growth and illness patterns of Lebanese infants (birth–18 months). Khayats. Beirut.Google Scholar
Illingworth, R.S. (1950) Birth weight and subsequent weight. Br. med. J. i, 96CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Interdepartmental Committee on Nutrition for National Defense (1962) The West Indies: Nutrition Survey. US Government Printing Office, Washington.Google Scholar
Lowe, C.R. & Gibson, J.R. (1953) Weight at third birthday related to birth weight, duration of gestation and birth order. Br. J. prev. soc. Med. 7, 78.Google Scholar
McGregor, I.A., Rahman, A.K., Thompson, B., Billewicz, W.Z. & Thomson, A.M. (1968) The growth of young children in a Gambian village. Trans. R. Soc. trop. Med. Hyg. 62, 341.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McKenzie, H.I., Lovell, H.G., Standard, K.L. & Miall, W.E. (1967) Child mortality in Jamaica. Milbank meml Fund q. Bull. 45, 303.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Meredith, H.V. (1952) North American negro infants: size at birth, and growth during the first post natal year. Hum. Biol. 24, 290.Google Scholar
Miall, W.E., Desai, P. & Standard, K.L. (1970) Diarrhoea, respiratory infections and child growth—a community study in rural Jamaica. J. biosoc. Sci. (in press).Google Scholar
Reed, R.B. & Stuart, H.C. (1959) Patterns of growth in height and weight from birth to eighteen years of age. Pediatrics, 24, 904.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Robertson, A.S. (1952) Height and weight tables of pre-school African native children. Trans. R. Soc. trop. Med. Hyg. 46, 560.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Scott, R.B., Hiatt, H.H., Clark, B.G., Kessler, A.D. & Ferguson, A.D. (1962) Growth and development of negro infants. IX. Studies on weight, height, pelvic breadth, head and chest circumferences during the first year of life. Pediatrics, 29, 65.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Standard, K.L., Lovell, H.G. & Garrow, J.S. (1966) The validity of certain physical signs as indices of generalised malnutrition in young children. J. trop. Paediat. 11, 100.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stock, M.B. & Smythe, P.M. (1963) Does undernutrition during infancy inhibit brain growth and subsequent intellectual development? Archs Dis. Childh. 38, 546.Google Scholar
Stuart, H.C. & Stevenson, S.S. (1959) Physical growth and development. In Textbook of Pediatrics. Ed. Nelson, W.E.. Saunders, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Tanner, J.M., Whitehouse, R.H. & Takaishi, M. (1966) Standards from birth to maturity for height, weight, height velocity and weight velocity. British children. 1965. Archs Dis. Childh. 41, 454, 613.Google Scholar
UK Ministry of Health (1959) Standards of normal weight in infancy. Reports on Public Health and Medical Matters, No, 99. HMSO, London.Google Scholar
Waterlow, J.C., Cravioto, J. & Stephen, J.M.L. (1960) Protein malnutrition in man. Advanc. Protein Chem. 15, 131.Google Scholar