Multiple burdens of malnutrition and relative remoteness in rural Ecuadorian communities

Public Health Nutr. 2021 Oct;24(14):4591-4602. doi: 10.1017/S1368980020004462. Epub 2020 Nov 6.

Abstract

Objective: Social and economic changes associated with new roads can bring about rapid nutritional transitions. To study this process, we: (1) describe trends in adult overweight and obesity (OW/OB) among rural Afro-Ecuadorians over time and across a gradient of community remoteness from the nearest commercial centre; (2) examine the relationship between male and female adult OW/OB and factors associated with market integration such as changing livelihoods and (3) examine the co-occurrence of adult OW/OB and under-five stunting and anaemia.

Design: Adult anthropometry was collected through serial case-control studies repeated over a decade across twenty-eight communities. At the same time, anthropometry and Hb were measured for all children under 5 years of age in every community.

Setting: Northern coastal Ecuador.

Participants: Adults (n 1665) and children under 5 years of age (n 2618).

Results: From 2003 and 2013, OW/OB increased from 25·1 % to 44·8 % among men and 59·9 % to 70·2 % among women. The inverse relationship between remoteness and OW/OB in men was attenuated when adjusting for urban employment, suggesting that livelihoods mediated the remoteness-OW/OB relationship. No such relationship was observed among women. Communities with a higher prevalence of male OW/OB also had a greater prevalence of stunting, but not anaemia, in children under 5 years of age.

Conclusions: The association between male OW/OB and child stunting at the community level, but not the household level, suggests that changing food environments, rather than household- or individual-level factors, drove these trends. A closer examination of changing socio-economic structures and food environments in communities undergoing rapid development could help mitigate future public health burdens.

Keywords: Afro-Ecuadorian; Anaemia; Double burden of malnutrition; Ecuador; Human nutrition; Nutrition transition; Overweight; Stunting.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Child, Preschool
  • Ecuador / epidemiology
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Malnutrition* / epidemiology
  • Obesity
  • Overweight / epidemiology
  • Prevalence
  • Rural Population