Table of Contents
Summary86 1. Background88 1.1 History and development of growth monitoring programmes88 1.2 Objectives of growth monitoring89 2. Expected benefits of growth monitoring and growth promotion90 3. Objectives of this review91 4. Methodology91 5. Evidence of effectiveness of growth monitoring programmes91 5.1 Nutritional status and mortality of young children91 5.1.1 Studies before 199091 5.1.2 Studies since 199096 5.2 Utilization of primary health services103 6. Quality of implementation104 7. Caregivers' knowledge and understanding of growth charts105 8. Empowerment and community mobilization106 9. Coverage and attendance10710. Potential consequences if withdrawn10811. Feasibility and conditions under which growth monitoring and promotion can be expected to work10812. Cost‐effectiveness10913. Potential adverse consequences10914. Policy considerations and recommendations110References113
Summary
The rationale for growth monitoring and promotion is persuasive but even in the 1980s the appropriateness of growth monitoring programmes was being questioned. The concerns centred largely around low participation rates, poor health worker performance and inadequacies in health system infrastructure that constrained effective growth‐promoting action. More recently there has been a call for a general review of the impact of large‐scale growth monitoring and promotion programmes to determine if the investments are justified. The launch of the new World Health Organization growth standard and charts has been a timely reminder of this debate. It is within this context that this review has been undertaken: the main purpose is to analyse the evidence that growth monitoring programmes are effective in conferring measurable benefits to the children for whom growth charts are kept. The benefits considered here are improved nutritional status, increased utilization of health services and reductions in mortality.
There is evidence from small‐scale studies in Nigeria, Jamaica, India (Narangwal and Jamkhed), and from large programmes in Tanzania (Iringa), India (Tamil Nadu Integrated Nutrition Project), Madagascar and Senegal that children whose growth is monitored and whose mothers receive nutrition and health education and have access to basic child health services have a better nutritional status and/or survival than children who do not. There is tentative evidence from a large‐scale programme in Brazil (Ceara) that participation in growth monitoring confers a significant benefit on nutritional status independent of immunization and socio‐economic status. There is evidence from India (Integrated Child Development Services) and Bangladesh (Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee and Bangladesh Integrated Nutrition Project) that growth monitoring has little or no effect on nutritional status in large‐scale programmes with weak nutrition counselling. There is evidence from Tamil Nadu in a randomized trial that when mothers are visited fortnightly at home and have unhurried counselling, no additional benefit accrues...
This is the first statewide assessment of anemia prevalence among young children in Brazil. Given the very high prevalence of anemia among the children studied in Pernambuco, especially those in the age group of 6-23 months, public health interventions are needed.
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