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Stunting: a multisector challenges and unfinished nutrition agenda
Author(s) -
Elvina Karyadi
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
universa medicina
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2407-2230
pISSN - 1907-3062
DOI - 10.18051/univmed.2019.v38.69-72
Subject(s) - wasting , underweight , malnutrition , environmental health , double burden , indonesian , anemia , medicine , socioeconomics , economic growth , obesity , economics , overweight , linguistics , philosophy , endocrinology
It was a great news that during the President election campaign, both President and Vice President candidates addressed a stunting problem during the debate. It shows that stunting is placed as national priority of nutrition problems. Stunting is part of a wider nutrition crises in Indonesia: wasting, anemia and double-burden of malnutrition. According to the 2018 National Health Survey (RISKESDAS), 30.8 percent of Indonesian children under 5 years of age were stunted (almost 8 million children), 17.7 percent were underweight, 10.2 percent were wasted (low weight-for-height).  Although the prevalence of stunting declined significantly from the 2013 (37.2%), the stunting rates remain unacceptably high. A child that is wasted faces double the risk of mortality associated with stunting. Even, a child that is both stunted and wasted faces a higher risk. Frequent episodes of wasting increase the risk of stunting.  

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