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Nutrition assessment survey of school children of Dharwad and Haliyal taluks, Karnataka State, INDIA.

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dc.contributor.author Pravin Chandra, K. R.
dc.contributor.author Padennavar, Uma M.
dc.contributor.author Sadashivappa, T.
dc.contributor.author Prabhakara, G. N.
dc.date.accessioned 2012-12-01T11:25:43Z
dc.date.available 2012-12-01T11:25:43Z
dc.date.issued 2006-02
dc.identifier.citation Kathmandu University Journal of Science, Engineering and Technology. 2006 Feb; 2(1): 1-19. en_US
dc.identifier.issn 1816-8752
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/231
dc.description.abstract This study was undertaken to find out the magnitude of the problem of under nutrition among the rural school going children of ages 4 to 14 years and also to identify the epidemiological factors influencing the nutritional status. All 1808 school going children of 49 villages of Dharwad and Haliyal taluks were included in the study undertaken during Mar-Apr 2005. Systematic random sampling was applied and 557 children were studied for nutritional assessment. Both the criteria for spotting under nutrition namely using the WHO/Govt. of India Road to Health card and also the CDC 2000 Standard for BMI for the given age and sex were followed. The morbidity rate in the universe was 62.9% and the nutrition related disorders rate was 59.4%. The anthropometric methods spotted 44.4% of children as underweight /having lean BMI. Nutrition related disorders were not related to either the father’s or the mother’s neither illiteracy nor they were related to type of the occupation of the father. They were associated with the presence of underweight/lean body mass index (p<0.01). More boys than girls had nutrition related disorders (p<0.05). Backward Hindu (p<0.001) as well as Muslim and Christians had more nutrition related disorders than forward Hindu children (p<0.05). The literacy status was higher among forward Hindu parents than backward Hindus (p<0.02) and least among Muslims (p<0.05). The backward community children had better weight for age / BMI profile than forwards (p<0.005). Higher BMI among the Siddhi community, a backward community originating from Arab slave trade from Africa living in the north eastern districts of Karnataka and Goa is documented in another one or two studies of this kind. The usefulness of WHO/GOI Road to Health card and the CDC-2000- BMI Standards for Nutritional Surveillance of school age children can yield higher dividends before clinical methods pick up or spot the nutrition related disorders. Periodic deworming, anti anaemia measures, nutrition education in addition to hygiene education and vitamin A supplementation in school age up to 14 years are recommended. Backward communities including Siddhi community need to be targeted. Literacy is not enough; what is needed is Nutrition education of the parents of the school age children. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Kathmandu University Journal of Science, Engineering and Technology en_US
dc.subject Undernutrition en_US
dc.subject Rural children-nutrition en_US
dc.subject School children-nutrition en_US
dc.title Nutrition assessment survey of school children of Dharwad and Haliyal taluks, Karnataka State, INDIA. en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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