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Determinants of anemia among preschool children in rural, western Kenya.

Abstract:
Although anemia in preschool children is most often attributed to iron deficiency, other nutritional, infectious, and genetic contributors are rarely concurrently measured. In a population-based, cross-sectional survey of 858 children 6-35 months of age in western Kenya, we measured hemoglobin, malaria, inflammation, sickle cell, α-thalassemia, iron deficiency, vitamin A deficiency, anthropometry, and socio-demographic characteristics. Anemia (Hb < 11 g/dL) and severe anemia (Hb < 7 g/dL) prevalence ratios (PRs) for each exposure were determined using multivariable modeling. Anemia (71.8%) and severe anemia (8.4%) were common. Characteristics most strongly associated with anemia were malaria (PR: 1.7; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.5-1.9), iron deficiency (1.3; 1.2-1.4), and homozygous α-thalassemia (1.3; 1.1-1.4). Characteristics associated with severe anemia were malaria (10.2; 3.5-29.3), inflammation (6.7; 2.3-19.4), and stunting (1.6; 1.0-2.4). Overall 16.8% of anemia cases were associated with malaria, 8.3% with iron deficiency, and 6.1% with inflammation. Interventions should address malaria, iron deficiency, and non-malarial infections to decrease the burden of anemia in this population.

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Publisher copy:
10.4269/ajtmh.12-0560

Authors



Journal:
American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene More from this journal
Volume:
88
Issue:
4
Pages:
757-764
Publication date:
2013-04-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1476-1645
ISSN:
0002-9637


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:384127
UUID:
uuid:572848d7-6f8d-4553-8089-faa254d144f7
Local pid:
pubs:384127
Source identifiers:
384127
Deposit date:
2013-11-17

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