dc.description.abstract | The prevalence of stunting, wasting, and underweight are reported separately. How-
ever, the data of the multiple anthropometric failures combinations of these conven-
tional indicators are scant. This study attempted to estimate the overall burden of
undernutrition among children under 5 years old, using the composite index of
anthropometric failure (CIAF), and to explore the correlates. The study used second-
ary data from the Bangladesh demographic and health surveys (BDHS), undertaken in
2014. CIAF provides an overall prevalence of undernutrition, which gives six mutually
exclusive anthropometric measurements of height‐for‐ age, height‐for‐weight, and
weight‐for‐age. Multivariable logistic regression was used to explore the correlates
of CIAF. The overall prevalence of undernutrition using the CIAF was 48.3% (95%
CI [47.1%, 49.5%]) among the children under 5 years old. The prevalence of anthro-
pometric failure due to a combination of both stunting and underweight was
18.2%, wasting and underweight was 5.5%, and wasting, underweight, and stunting
was 5.7%. The odds of CIAF were higher among young maternal age, having the
poorest socio‐economic status, living in rural areas, higher order of birth, and received
no vaccination compared with other counterparts. In Bangladesh, one out of two chil-
dren has undernutrition, which is preventing the potential of the millions of children.
Mothers who gave birth before age 20 living in the rural areas with belonging to
lower socio‐economic status and whose children had a higher order of birth and
receive no vaccination were observed as the main determinants of undernutrition.
Nutrition sensitive interventions along with social protection programmes are crucial
to deal the underlying causes of undernutrition. | en_US |