# Simultaneous Wasting and Stunting (WaSt), Wasting and Anemia (WaAn) and Wasting, Stunting and Anemia (WaStAn) Among Children 6–59 Months in Karamoja, Uganda

**Authors:** Alex Mokori, Nicholas Kirimi, Amos H. Ndungutse, Zakaria Fusheini, Muzafaru Ssenyondo

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/fsn3.71149 · 2025-11-14

## TL;DR

A study in Uganda finds that nearly 5% of young children suffer from simultaneous wasting, stunting, and anemia, urging integrated solutions to address this severe malnutrition issue.

## Contribution

The study identifies and quantifies the triple burden of wasting, stunting, and anemia among children in Karamoja, Uganda.

## Key findings

- 4.6% of children aged 6–59 months experience simultaneous wasting, stunting, and anemia.
- Boys and children aged 12–23 months are more vulnerable to these conditions.
- Key predictors include child age, sex, household wealth, and maternal education.

## Abstract

Child malnutrition remains a critical public health challenge in Karamoja, Uganda. This study examined the prevalence and determinants of simultaneous wasting, stunting, and anemia (WaStAn) among children aged 6–59 months using secondary data from the 2022 Food Security and Nutrition Assessment (FSNA). The findings reveal alarmingly high rates of wasting (13.0%), stunting (41.4%), and anemia (55.1%), with 4.6% of children experiencing all three conditions concurrently. Children aged 12–23 months were disproportionately affected, and boys were more vulnerable than girls. The co‐existence of these conditions in the same child reflects multiple, overlapping deprivations—nutritional, environmental, and socioeconomic—that compound risk and elevate mortality. Key predictors of WaStAn included child age, sex, district of residence, household wealth, maternal education, food consumption score, and type of residence. The study underscores the urgent need for integrated, multisectoral interventions that address the root causes of undernutrition and anemia. Recommended actions include early screening and treatment, promotion of optimal infant and young child feeding, micronutrient supplementation, deworming, improved water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH), women's empowerment, and strengthened district‐level capacity to deliver nutrition services at scale. These findings highlight the importance of addressing the triple burden of malnutrition holistically, rather than through siloed approaches, to improve child survival and development outcomes in high‐burden settings like Karamoja.

Simultaneous wasting, stunting, and anemia affect 4.6% of children aged 6–59 months in Karamoja, Uganda. This study highlights the urgent need for integrated, context‐specific strategies to address this critical and under‐recognized burden of child undernutrition.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Child malnutrition (MESH:D015362), Anemia (MESH:D000740), Wasting (MESH:D019282), malnutrition (MESH:D044342), Stunting (MESH:D006130)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12616507/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12616507