Clinical and Epidemiological Profile of Nutritional Anemia and Its Impact on Developmental Outcome Among Children Attending Ruhengeri Referral Hospital
Cedrick Izere

TL;DR
This study examines the causes and effects of nutritional anemia in young children in Rwanda, finding it is strongly linked to developmental delays.
Contribution
The study identifies key risk factors for iron deficiency and megaloblastic anemia and their impact on child development in a specific regional hospital setting.
Findings
Iron deficiency anemia was significantly more prevalent (93.4%) than megaloblastic anemia (6.6%).
Nutritional anemia was strongly associated with developmental delay (p < 0.0001).
Factors like rural residence, meal frequency, and lack of nutritional knowledge were significantly linked to anemia.
Abstract
Nutritional anemia is a serious health concern that affects particularly children under 5 years of age and causes problems of physical and mental growth and development. A cross-sectional study determined the rates and risk factors of iron deficiency anemia (IDA) and megaloblastic anemia (MA) and assessed the effect of IDA and MA on developmental outcome at Ruhengeri Referral Hospital from April 2021 to March 2022. The Cochran's formula: n=Z2PQ/d2 was used to calculate the sample size of 318 and children aged between 6 and 59 months were purposively selected and included in the study. Venous blood specimens were collected in EDTA and clot activator tubes for complete blood count (CBC) and ferritin, respectively, used Sysmex 500i and Cobas e411 analyzers, respectively. Demographic and clinical information was collected on participants and the data were analyzed by Statistical Package for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild Nutrition and Water Access · Iron Metabolism and Disorders · Indigenous Health and Education
