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Browsing by Author "Otitoola, O.C."

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    Region, location, and age-specific comparison of nutritional status of in-school adolescent girls (10-19 years) in Nigeria
    (World Public Health Nutrition Association (WPHNA), 2024) Olumakaiye, M.F.; Nzeagwu, O.C.; Otitoola, O.C.; Ariyo, O.; Abe, J.; Popoola, B.R.; Gbemileke, A.; Akinyotu, E.O.
    Background: Nutritional status among female adolescents in Nigeria is becoming a major concern because it determines health outcomes and productivity in their adult years. There is a growing recognition of the potential to promote a healthy start to life for the next generation by addressing health and nutritional risks in adolescents. Objective This study assessed the nutritional status of in-school adolescent girls in Nigeria and made comparisons across regions, locations, and age groups. Methods A multistage stratified random sampling procedure was used to select participants from three geopolitical zones in Nigeria for this descriptive cross-sectional study of 2261 inschool adolescent girls aged 10 -19 years. Body mass index-for-age (BMI), waist-hip-ratio (WHR), and waist-height-ratio (WHtR) were calculated from weight, height, hip, waist, and mid-upper arm circumferences measurements. Results The mean age was 14.9 years (± 1.78 years), the mean body weight was 47.8 kg (± 9.02 kg), compared to a calculated mean ideal weight of 54.5 kg (± 9.05 kg). Using BMI, 9.8% of these adolescent girls were underweight, 7% were either overweight or obese, 47.9% were at risk judging from WHR, 10% had abdominal obesity present using WHtR, 35.7% were malnourished, and 11.8% were obese using MUAC. South East girls were eleven times more likely to have a high BMI (OR=11.341, 95%CI=6.059-21.225) and three times more likely to have a high WHtR (OR=2.870, 95%CI=1.954-4.213) than other regions. The likelihood of being overweight/obese was higher among urban than peri-urban girls; BMI (OR=1.008, 95%CI=0.728-1.395) and MUACoverweight (OR=1.280, 95%CI=0.988-1.657). Older girls, 14- 16yrs; WHtR (OR = 1.426, 95%CI = 0.970-2.097) and 17 -19yrs (OR = 1.024, 95%CI = 0.617- 1.699) were likely to be overweight/obese compared to 10 -13yrs (OR=3.878, 95%CI=2.385- 6.305). Girls 14 -16 were three times and 17-19 were six times more likely to have higher MUAC overweight (OR = 3.878, 95%CI = 2.385-6.305) and (OR=6.371, 95%CI=3.854-10.865), respectively than those at 10-13 years. Conclusions These findings underscore the significant disparities in the nutritional status of adolescent girls across regions, locations, and age ranges in Nigeria. This highlights the urgent need for targeted, region-specific nutrition-sensitive intervention programmes among adolescent girls, potentially leading to improved public health outcomes in Nigeria.

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