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Journal of Human Growth and Development

versão impressa ISSN 0104-1282versão On-line ISSN 2175-3598

J. Hum. Growth Dev. vol.27 no.1 São Paulo jan./abr. 2017

http://dx.doi.org/10.7322/jhgd.127647 

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

 

Comparison of the nutritional status in children aged 5 to 10 years old on the Conditional Cash Transfer Programme in the States of Acre and Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

 

Comparação do estado nutricional em crianças de cinco a dez anos de idade beneficiárias do Programa de transferência de dinheiro condicional nos Estados do Acre e do Rio Grande do Sul, Brasil

 

 

Anderson Gonçalves FreitasI; Diego Gonçalves de LimaI; Miguel Junior Sordi BortoliniII; Dionatas Ulises de Oliveira MeneguettiIII; Edigê Felipe de Sousa SantosIV; Romeu Paulo Martins SilvaV

INutricionista, Mestrando em Ciências da Saúde na Amazônia Ocidental da Universidade Federal do Acre - UFAC - Bloco Francisco Mangabeira Sala 17 - Campus Universitário - 1º Piso, BR 364, Km 04 - Distrito Industrial, CEP 69915-900 - Rio Branco-AC
IIDoutor em Imunologia e Parasitologia Aplicadas, Prof. Dr.º Universidade Federal do Acre - UFAC - Bloco Francisco Mangabeira Sala 17 - Campus Universitário - 1º Piso, BR 364, Km 04 - Distrito Industrial, CEP 69915-900 - Rio Branco-AC
IIIDoutor em Biologia Experimental, Prof. Dr.º Universidade Federal do Acre - UFAC. - Bloco Francisco Mangabeira Sala 17 - Campus Universitário - 1º Piso, BR 364, Km 04 - Distrito Industrial, CEP 69915-900 - Rio Branco-AC
IVMestre em Ciências da Saúde. Departamento de Epidemiologia, Faculdade de Saúde Pública da Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, São Paulo, Brasil
VDoutor em Genética e Bioquímica, Prof. Dr.º Universidade Federal do Acre - UFAC.- Bloco Francisco Mangabeira Sala 17 - Campus Universitário - 1º Piso, BR 364, Km 04 - Distrito Industrial, CEP 69915-900 - Rio Branco-AC

Correspondence

 

 


ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: In recent years, there has been a reduction in cases of malnutrition in Brazil but this has been accompanied with an increase in the overweight and obesity rates. These changes, together with others, such as changes in eating patterns and lifestyle, characterise the process of nutritional transition.
OBJECTIVE: We aimed to compare the prevalence of nutritional status of beneficiary children of the Bolsa Família Program (PBF) in the states of Acre and Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, and to analyse the changes in the anthropometric profile of these children during 5 years.
METHODS: This is an ecological study using secondary data from the Food and Nutrition Surveillance System (SISVAN) and Bolsa Família Department of SUS (DATASUS), which assessed the nutritional status of children over 5 years and under 10 years benefiting from the PBF in the years 2011 to 2015 in the states of Acre and Rio Grande do Sul. The sample consisted of 94,865 children from Acre and 342,462 children from Rio Grande do Sul. The Body Mass Index was used to classify the nutritional status.
RESULTS: The mean prevalence of eutrophic children aged 5 to 10 years in Acre was 70.42% and was 61.28% in Rio Grande do Sul. Overweight was 13.06% in Acre and 19.48% in Rio Grande do Sul. Obesity was 5.08% in Acre and 9.36% in Rio Grande do Sul. Severe obesity was 4.02% in Acre and 6.92% in Rio Grande do Sul.
CONCLUSION: Overweight and obesity in children benefiting from the PBF has been growing in the last 5 years, notably in the state of Rio Grande do Sul. This is possibly due to the fact that the nutritional transition is at a more advanced stage here than in Acre State.

Keywords: nutritional status; prevalence; child; public policy.


RESUMO

INTRODUÇÃO: No Brasil tem-se observado que houve uma redução nos casos de desnutrição nos últimos anos, porém acompanhado a esse decréscimo houve um aumento em relação às taxas de sobrepeso e obesidade. Essas mudanças em conjunto com outras como alteração dos padrões alimentares e o estilo de vida caracterizam o processo de transição nutricional.
OBJETIVO: Comparar as prevalências do perfil nutricional de crianças beneficiárias do Programa Bolsa Família dos estados do Acre e do Rio Grande do Sul, assim como analisar mudanças no perfil antropométrico dessas crianças por período de cinco anos.
MÉTODO: Trata-se de estudo ecológico utilizando dados secundários do Sistema de Vigilância Alimentar e Nutricional (SISVAN) e Bolsa Família do Departamento de Informática do SUS (DATASUS), no qual foi avaliado o estado nutricional de crianças maiores de cinco anos e menores de dez anos beneficiárias do Programa Bolsa Família (PBF) no ano de 2011 a 2015 nos estados do Acre e Rio Grande do Sul. A amostra constituiu de 94.865 crianças do Acre e 342.462 crianças do Rio Grande do Sul. Para classificar o estado nutricional utilizou-se o Índice de Massa Corporal/idade.
RESULTADOS: A média da prevalência de eutrofia de crianças na faixa etária cinco a dez anos beneficiárias no Acre foi de 70,42% e 61,28% no Rio Grande do Sul; o sobrepeso foi de 13,06% no Acre e 19,48% no Rio Grande do Sul; a obesidade 5,08% no Acre e 9,36% no Rio Grande do Sul; e a obesidade grave 4,02% no Acre e 6,92% no Rio Grande do Sul.
CONCLUSÃO: O sobrepeso e obesidade em crianças beneficiárias do PBF tem crescido nos últimos cinco anos, notadamente no estado do Rio Grande do Sul possivelmente pelo fato da transição nutricional já estar em um estágio mais avançado do que no Estado Acre.

Palavras-chave: estado nutricional, prevalência, criança, políticas públicas.


 

 

INTRODUCTION

Brazil, like other developing countries, has passed the nutritional transition including changes in traditional dietary pattern, replacing fibre and complex carbohydrates with the high intake of fat and red meat1. The nutritional transition can be characterised by four stages: progressive disappearance of "Kwashiorkor" or oedematous malnutrition; disappearance of nutritional marasmus; appearance of binomial overweight/obesity; and finally, deficit height2.

The constant increase in overweight and obesity in the world has already been seen as an epidemic and it has affected all social classes and all ages. The numbers of overweight children in the United States tripled between 1980 and 20003. As several studies demonstrate, Brazil has followed a similar pattern. For example, Abrantes, Lamounier and Colosimo4, assessed overweight and obesity in children and adolescents from the northeast and southeast regions of Brazil and found a prevalence of obesity in 8.2% and 11.9%, respectively. Balaban and Silva5 observed that in children and adolescents at a school in Recife, overweight and obesity were statistically more significant in children, reaching a prevalence of 26.2% and 8.5% of the sample, respectively.

In Brazil, the conditional cash transfer program, which is known as the Bolsa Família Program (PBF), was established by Law no. 10,836 on 9 January 2004 and was regulated by Decree no. 5209 on 18 November 2004. The PBF was created to improve the quality of a poor extract of the population through direct income transfer, subject to certain obligations that are designed to give this population access to public services6. The programme holders are mostly individuals at risk, the majority of whom are black or brown (64%), with primary school education (56%), with most of the holders being women (94%) and single mothers (27%)7.

The Food and Nutrition Surveillance Information System (SISVAN) is a health information system that transforms data into information and whose objective is to evaluate nutritional status through anthropometric measures of the individuals and, thus, provide a diagnosis of the nutritional situation. This allows us to allocate public policies for the most vulnerable population8.

The objective of this study is to compare the prevalence of the nutritional profile of beneficiary children of the PBF of two Brazilian states, the State of Acre (AC) and Rio Grande do Sul (RS), as well as to analyse changes in the anthropometric profile of these children for a period of 5 years.

 

METHODS

This is an ecological study carried out from secondary data, where the nutritional status of children over 5 years of age and under 10 years of age on the PBF was evaluated during the period 2011 to 2015 in the states of AC and RS. The data were obtained through the Food and Nutrition Surveillance System (SISVAN) and Bolsa Família, available at the Department of Information Technology of the SUS (DATASUS) website (www.datasus.gov.br). The method used in this study built on the study by Silva and Nunes9 which analysed the same audience but in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul in 2010.

The state of AC has 164.123km of territory, it is located in the north of Brazil and is composed of 22 municipalities with an estimated population in 2015 of 803,513 inhabitants10. AC has a the Human Development Index (HDI) of 0.663, being the penultimate of the region, just ahead of Pará State11.

RS has 281,737 km territory, it is located in the south of Brazil and is composed of 497 municipalities with an estimated population in 2015 of 11,247,972 inhabitants12. This state has the worst HDI of 0.746 region11. The choice of the HDI was made because it is a composite index that combines three of the most important dimensions of human development, which are: the opportunity to live a long and healthy life, having access to knowledge, and having a standard of living that ensures the basic needs, as represented by health, education and income13.

For the present study, information was collected on 5 to 10 year old children from AC and RS who were beneficiaries of the PBF in the years 2011 to 2015, and described the process in figure 1. In 2011, there were 10,401 children aged 5 to 10 years in AC and 54,018 in RS for the nutritional status of both genders. In 2012, in AC there were 11,249 and in there were RS 53,347. In the year of 2013, there were part records of 19,004 in AC and 71,798 in RS. In 2014, in AC there were 26,371 and in RS there were 81,930.Finally, in 2015, 27,840 children were enrolled in AC and 81,369 were enrolled in RS.

 

 

The body mass index (BMI), which was calculated by dividing the body mass (kg) and the square of the height (m), was used to classify the nutritional status of the PBF beneficiary children. The World Health Organisation cut-offs14 were used as a reference, as employed by SISVAN from 2008. The BMI cut-offs vary according to age and nutritional status and can be classified from percentile and/or Z-score. The Z-score was used in this research and was calculated by SISVAN itself. The following six cut-offs for BMI are defined based on the Z-score14: a) sharp thinness (< -3); b) thinness (> -3 and < -2); c) eutrophic (> -2 and < +1); d) overweight (> +1 and < +2); e) obesity (> +2 and < +3); and f) severe obesity (> +3). For this study, the categories described in items a and b will not be used; only items c, d, and e are used.

Anthropometric measurements were collected and recorded as the standardisations of SISVAN15. The body mass measurement is obtained with a calibrated scale, which can be a mechanical platform or digital. Stature is assessed with a vertical anthropometry or by using an anthropometric tape affixed to the wall. The health primary care professionals who are responsible for data collection received the manual and followed the procedures contained in the document15.

For the treatment of the data, Excel was used to obtain information from the SISVAN website and to analyse the information in a descriptive way (absolute and relative frequencies). We used GraphPad Prism® version 5.00 for the calculation of confidence intervals and ANOVA two-way test and Tukey to identify differences between the proportions. A significance level of 5% was adopted.

The present study involves only the description and analysis of secondary data. All of these sources of information are in the public domain. In particular, no information with individual identification was obtained for this study. Thus, this study waived the opinion of an ethics committee.

 

RESULTS

Table 1 shows the prevalence of 5-year nutritional status of PBF recipients in the states of AC and RS. It is observed that there is an increase in the prevalence of eutrophic nutritional status during the 5 years in children from AC when compared to RS. The prevalence of overweight and obesity were higher in RS. Severe obesity in the children of AC has decreased over the years analysed. A significant association was found between the two states and in all of the items used in the present study (Table 1).

As can be seen in Figure 2, in the period from 2011 to 2015, the average prevalence of eutrophic beneficiary children in the age group 5 to 10 years in AC was 70.42% and was 61.28% in RS. The overweight group was 13.06% in AC and 19.48% in RS. Obesity was 5.08% in AC and 9.36% in RS. Severe obesity was 4.02% in the AC and 6.92% in RS. A difference was observed between the two states in all of the variables analysed, with statistical significance (p <0.001). RS accumulate higher levels of overweight, obesity and severe obesity when compared to AC.

 

DISCUSSION

The results showed the nutritional profile of the children benefiting from the PBF. The prevalence of overweight (overweight+obesity) increased in AC and RS during the analysed years. In addition, in the RS state the prevalence of eutrophy reduced while in AC the opposite was observed. In addition, the children from RS had higher values of obesity and severe obesity.

In relation to anthropometric data, the prevalence of eutrophic was 70.4% in AC and 61.3% in RS, while the prevalence of overweight was 13% in AC and 19% in RS. This result is similar to that found by Pelegrini et al.15, who evaluated 2,913 children from seven to nine years old living in Brazil and estimated that the prevalence of normal weight of 81.9% and 72.3%, respectively, in the north and south and overweight of 13% and 17.5%. When comparing three references to classify nutritional status, Melo et al.16 obtained a prevalence of 77.4% of normal weight and 13.1% overweight in Rio Branco children, AC. Overweight data were also similar to those found in two north-eastern capitals (Recife was 12.9% and Sergipe was 13.2%)9,17. On the other hand, there was a lack of available data on the nutritional status of children in the Amazon region.

It was also verified that overweight children showed a growing tendency during the years studied in both states. Even with different socioeconomic and cultural characteristics, the prevalence continues to increase. With the digital revolution, urbanisation and violence in large cities, the standard of life of children and adolescents has also changed over the years, increasing the time spent in front of TVs or computers18, helping to lift overweight indicators and obesity.

A study conducted with PBF beneficiary families in Curitiba, Paraná, notified the individuals who reported their food as inadequate, which could be caused by several reasons, such as lack or low consumption of vegetables and fruits, or because of the high costs of these products19. When poor families have higher incomes they tend to spend more on foods that are rich in sugars and fats, and this may be the reason for the increase of overweight observed in this layer20. Socioeconomic status interferes in the prevalence of overweight and obesity in that it determines the availability of food and access to information17.

Obesity is a disease of multifactorial origin and its prevalence among children has increased worldwide. The main risks to the health of obese children are hyperlipidaemia, systemic hypertension, and psychological source of damage because obese children are discriminated against21. A prevalence of 5.08% of obesity in children from AC and 9.36% in children from RS was found. These findings are similar to the results of Rech et al.22, who researched schoolchildren aged 7 to 12 years on a mountain city of RS and found obesity rates of 7.4%, 8.4%, 7.2% and 9.8% for children 7, 8, 9 and 10 years, respectively. Oliveira et al.23 found that there was a positive association between high levels of parental education, high family income, and presence of home appliances such as TV, computer and video game with obesity. This fact may explain the difference between the prevalence of the disease in these states because the population of RS has greater purchasing power and more access to consumer goods.

Regarding the increase of overweight in children and adolescents in urban, rural and indigenous areas, changes in lifestyle have favoured the prevalence excess weight of 14% to 30%24.Thus, it has been shown that poor eating habits and sedentary lifestyle are not just characteristics of urban centres. These data corroborate with those found in this study, which shows that obesity and overweight in PBF beneficiary children has grown in more urban areas, such as in the south, and in more rural areas, such as in the north.

Mantovani et al.25 evaluated the height for age in children aged under 5 years old in one AC municipality and found that stunting is still present with a prevalence of 14.4% of the sample. Low stature for age may indicate accumulated malnutrition over a long period, adversely affecting health and often without possibility of recovery, impeding the full physical development of children. The maternal economic situation and open sewage were variables that showed an increase in dwarfism in the sample according to the authors. Their study corroborates the idea that the AC population lives in the extremes of malnutrition and obesity.

Accurate classification of the nutritional profile of children is crucial in determining the extent of problems at the public health level. In the diagnosis of overweight and obesity by BMI in children and adolescents, there are several national and international anthropometric recommended references that hinder the development of overweight and obesity prevention actions16. It is also worth noting that our data are maintained by the Ministry of Health and, therefore, are reliable and representative of the population. This makes it a feasible tool to establish more accurate data on the nutritional profile of beneficiary children of the PBF of the states of AC and RS.

Researchers have analysed data from 17,561 children from Europe Asia and Africa, and found that a sedentary lifestyle, family risk behaviour (maternal obesity, smoking near the child and not eat breakfast), low income and low education were the factors more associated with childhood obesity26. In Brazil, Abrantes, Lamounier and Colosimo4 evaluated obesity in children of the northeast and southeast and found that obesity was increasingly prevalent in the southeast (8.2% and 11.9%, respectively). This result is similar to that found in this present study, in which AC is in a more favourable situation than RS. One can attribute this fact to the food characteristics of the population of different localities. The parents' habits directly influence the food preference and physical activity habits of their children27-29.The state of AC is still considered to be underdeveloped and it has no access to shopping centres, it is not bombarded by marketing of fast-food outlets and it still retains the traditional food culture.

Silva estimated the prevalence of overweight and obesity in children living in a capital city in the northeast and beneficiaries of income transfer program and identified prevalence of obesity between 11% and 15.1%, recommending priority of health services for this population30. Saldanha et al.31 found similar results in children of a capital in the southeast, concluding that the population covered by the Family Grant Programme is going through the process of nutritional transition. This change in food pattern reflects the increase in overall food consumption, including processed foods of high caloric density and low nutritional quality.

According to work proposed by Bezerra and Sorpreso32, it is important that health promotion practices trigger mechanisms that are aimed at the creation or re-creation of a new model to produce health, in order to overcome the actions still oriented by the exclusively biological approach. The monitoring was carried out by professionals from the primary level to the PBF, which is a great incentive for the eradication of weakness and poverty, including educational and training activities to children and their families33.Therefore, PBF-assisted population characterisation studies may be able to induce improvements in the quality of children health care, including at the primary level, where prevention and treatment measures remain ineffective.

Machado et al.34 showed that the school health programme in Brazil has mobilised relevant actions with health care professionals in schools, even if it has not been used homogeneously in all Brazilian regions. The regions that have the most accomplished actions are in the north and northeast. This may be a possible explanation why the nutritional status of the children in AC is better than that of children in RS. This may be associated to the fact that these regions have greater social and economic inequalities, and have had a longer history of the use of health teams.

Searches using secondary data have several limitations and they can be subject to errors of registration, typing and under-reporting, which is a limitation of this study. It was not possible to identify new registrations of children in PBF from year to year, only the total existing beneficiaries of the programme was available.

Although the results obtained in this study bring data from two Brazilian states with different characteristics, they had both experienced increases in the prevalence of overweight and obese children. In terms of public health, indicators of morbidity and its direct association with assisted age groups guide high quality services. Population characterisation studies are important for tracking, planning, and effectively allocating health resources to populations at risk, and may be able to induce improvements in the quality of health care of these children, including the primary level, in which excess prevention measures remain ineffective.

Individuals benefiting from the PBF showed an increase in the overweight and obesity strata. This demonstrates that the nutritional profile of these children is not adequate and it can be justified that this population has access to food in general, including processed foods and the globalisation of unhealthy habits.

It can be concluded that the numbers of overweight and obese children receiving PBF have increased in the last 5 years, notably in the state of RS. This possibly happened because the nutritional transition is already at a more advanced stage in RS than in the state of AC.

Interest conflicts

The authors of this manuscript declare there are no conflicts of interest involved.

 

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Correspondence:
Anderson Gonçalves Freitas
Email: anderson.freitas2@hotmail.com

Manuscript submitted in 2016
Accepted for publication in Jan 2017

 

 

 Pesquisa realizada no Centro de Ciências da Saúde e do Desporto da Universidade Federal do Acre.

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