A landmark population survey from Ecuador reveals a complex public health emergency affecting 73.3% of children under five, with multiple forms of malnutrition clustering within vulnerable communities. The research, published in The Lancet Regional Health Americas, demonstrates that children often experience simultaneous conditions including stunting, anaemia, and overweight—a phenomenon researchers call the triple burden of malnutrition.
The study, which analyzed data from 8,864 children in Ecuador’s 2018 National Health and Nutrition Survey, exposes stark disparities driven by structural inequities. Indigenous children experience disproportionately high rates across all malnutrition types, with stunting affecting 42.8% compared to 18.1% among white children. Dr. Wilma Freire and colleagues from Universidad San Francisco de Quito highlight how geographic and socioeconomic clustering perpetuates these health inequalities.
These findings underscore the urgent need for integrated, equity-focused interventions addressing the root causes of childhood malnutrition in Latin America.
Read the full article on GMJ Newsroom.
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