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Height and body-mass index trajectories of school-aged children and adolescents from 1985 to 2019 in 200 countries and territories: a pooled analysis of 2181 population-based studies with 65 million participants
Imperial College London, UK.
University of Skövde, School of Health Sciences. University of Skövde, Digital Health Research (DHEAR). (Individ och samhälle VIDSOC, Individual and Society)ORCID iD: 0000-0002-4397-3721
Imperial College London, UK ; University of Ghana, Ghana.
Number of Authors: 13772020 (English)In: The Lancet, ISSN 0140-6736, E-ISSN 1474-547X, Vol. 396, no 10261, p. 1511-1524Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Summary

Background

Comparable global data on health and nutrition of school-aged children and adolescents are scarce. We aimed to estimate age trajectories and time trends in mean height and mean body-mass index (BMI), which measures weight gain beyond what is expected from height gain, for school-aged children and adolescents.

Methods

For this pooled analysis, we used a database of cardiometabolic risk factors collated by the Non-Communicable Disease Risk Factor Collaboration. We applied a Bayesian hierarchical model to estimate trends from 1985 to 2019 in mean height and mean BMI in 1-year age groups for ages 5–19 years. The model allowed for non-linear changes over time in mean height and mean BMI and for non-linear changes with age of children and adolescents, including periods of rapid growth during adolescence.

Findings

We pooled data from 2181 population-based studies, with measurements of height and weight in 65 million participants in 200 countries and territories. In 2019, we estimated a difference of 20 cm or higher in mean height of 19-year-old adolescents between countries with the tallest populations (the Netherlands, Montenegro, Estonia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina for boys; and the Netherlands, Montenegro, Denmark, and Iceland for girls) and those with the shortest populations (Timor-Leste, Laos, Solomon Islands, and Papua New Guinea for boys; and Guatemala, Bangladesh, Nepal, and Timor-Leste for girls). In the same year, the difference between the highest mean BMI (in Pacific island countries, Kuwait, Bahrain, The Bahamas, Chile, the USA, and New Zealand for both boys and girls and in South Africa for girls) and lowest mean BMI (in India, Bangladesh, Timor-Leste, Ethiopia, and Chad for boys and girls; and in Japan and Romania for girls) was approximately 9–10 kg/m2. In some countries, children aged 5 years started with healthier height or BMI than the global median and, in some cases, as healthy as the best performing countries, but they became progressively less healthy compared with their comparators as they grew older by not growing as tall (eg, boys in Austria and Barbados, and girls in Belgium and Puerto Rico) or gaining too much weight for their height (eg, girls and boys in Kuwait, Bahrain, Fiji, Jamaica, and Mexico; and girls in South Africa and New Zealand). In other countries, growing children overtook the height of their comparators (eg, Latvia, Czech Republic, Morocco, and Iran) or curbed their weight gain (eg, Italy, France, and Croatia) in late childhood and adolescence. When changes in both height and BMI were considered, girls in South Korea, Vietnam, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and some central Asian countries (eg, Armenia and Azerbaijan), and boys in central and western Europe (eg, Portugal, Denmark, Poland, and Montenegro) had the healthiest changes in anthropometric status over the past 3·5 decades because, compared with children and adolescents in other countries, they had a much larger gain in height than they did in BMI. The unhealthiest changes—gaining too little height, too much weight for their height compared with children in other countries, or both—occurred in many countries in sub-Saharan Africa, New Zealand, and the USA for boys and girls; in Malaysia and some Pacific island nations for boys; and in Mexico for girls.

Interpretation

The height and BMI trajectories over age and time of school-aged children and adolescents are highly variable across countries, which indicates heterogeneous nutritional quality and lifelong health advantages and risks.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Elsevier, 2020. Vol. 396, no 10261, p. 1511-1524
National Category
Pediatrics Public Health, Global Health and Social Medicine
Research subject
Individual and Society VIDSOC
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:his:diva-19236DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(20)31859-6ISI: 000587548800040PubMedID: 33160572Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85095409894OAI: oai:DiVA.org:his-19236DiVA, id: diva2:1499523
Funder
Wellcome trustAstraZenecaEU, Horizon 2020
Note

CC BY 4.0 Network: NCD Risk Factor Collaboration (NCD-RisC). Funding: Wellcome Trust, AstraZeneca Young Health Programme, EU. Correspondence to: Prof Majid Ezzati, School of Public Health, Imperial College London, London W2 1PG, UK

Available from: 2020-11-09 Created: 2020-11-09 Last updated: 2025-09-29Bibliographically approved

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Eiben, Gabriele

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