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Revista Criterios - 28 (2) julio - diciembre 2021 Rev. Criterios - pp. 91-110
ISSN: 0121-8670, ISSN Electrónico: 2256-1161,
https://doi.org/10.31948/rev.criterios
Universidad Mariana, San Juan de Pasto, Nariño, Colombia.
Impacto de factores socioeconómicos en la nutrición de niños
entre 2,5 a 5 años en la ciudad de Pasto, Colombia
Gloria Córdoba
John Fuertez
Jonier Martínez
remains important in Central America. In
Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua
more than 20% of children 2.5 – 5 years of age
were aected by this situation while Costa Rica
was placed among the countries with close
values or less than 5% (Comisión Económica
para América Latina y El Caribe, CEPAL,
2004). Latin America and the Caribbean is the
only region that achieved to reduce hungry,
anticipating the food crisis since the availability
of products (e.g., cereals), associated with
climatology diversity, contributed signicantly
to access to food for the most vulnerable
people, strengthening food and nutritional
security in the region and becoming an
important supplier of food worldwide (Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations,
FAO, 2015). However, with the raising of food
prices and subsequent economic crisis, this
trend was reversed, which implicated that food
security acquires importance in the political
and social agenda of such countries. For a
region that presents surplus in food availability,
estimations from the United Nations Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO, 2012) showed
that the undernourished population reached
52.5 million people, equivalent to 9% of the
population and 600 thousand less than the
value in 2009.
From 2010 to 2019, it is possible to visualize
a decrease in hunger by 16.6%, being the
lowest level since 2000; sixteen countries
have reduced the prevalence moving towards
the achievement of the objectives of the 2030
agenda. Among them, Honduras stands out
with a decrease of 3.5 percentage points in
its prevalence of undernourishment. República
Dominicana reduced it by 3 percentage points
and Ecuador by 2.9 points. During the same
period, Bolivia, Colombia, and El Salvador also
stand out, all of them with a reduction of 1.8
percentage points of their prevalence. During
the last decades, malnutrition has shown a
sustained low trend which would cause a real
change in the nutritional, epidemiological, and
demographic prole of these countries (FAO,
2020).
In Colombia, food security had an important role
when the Political Constitution of 1991, article
44, included a balanced diet as a fundamental
right for children (Constitución Política de
Colombia, 1991); also, the articles 63, 64,
and 65 were added to protect agricultural
production and therefore the availability of food
as government’s duties (Constitución Política de
Colombia, 1991; Posada, 2011). However, the
non-fulllment of these duties and deep social
inequality are a matter of concern (Álvarez and
Pérez, 2013). The National Survey of Nutritional
Situation ENSIN-2015 (Instituto Colombiano
de Bienestar Familiar, ICBF, 2015), which is
the statistical operation of national reference
on the nutritional situation of the Colombian
population, allows evaluating the advances and
achievements in early childhood issues in the
last 5 years. According to this survey, chronic
malnutrition decreased from 13.2% in 2010
to 10.8% in 2015 for children under 5 years
old. In 1990, one in four children suered from
chronic malnutrition, while it was only one
in ten, by 2015. Colombia continues within
the 5% goal established by the World Health
Organization (WHO) on acute malnutrition or a
weight-for-height indicator. In 2015, it reached
1.6%, higher than the 0.9% presented in
2010. Global malnutrition, which marks the
weight for age, aects 3.7% of under-age in
the country, less than half of the 1990 record
when it aected 8.6% of children under 5 years
of age.
The negative impact and long-term eect of an
inadequate nutrition level on children have been
pointed out by recent studies (Brazionis, Golley,
Mittinty, Smithers, Emmett, Northstone, and
Lynch, 2013; Dubois, Farmer, Girard, Peterson,
and Tatone-Tokuda, 2007; Montañez, 2017;
Noble, Houston, Brito, Bartsch, Kan, Kuperman,
Akshoomo, Amaral, Bloss, Libiger, Schork,
Murray, Casey, Chang, Ernst, Frazier, Gruen,
Kennedy, Van Zijl, and Sowell, 2015; Noble,
2017; Persaud, Maguire, Lebovic, Carsley,
Khovratovich, Randall McCrindle, Parkin, and
Birken, 2013; Silva, 2016; Volger, Sheng, Tong,
Zhao, Fan, Zhang, Ge, Ho, Hays, and Yao,
2017). Early malnutrition decreases learning
capabilities, school performance, economic
productivity in adult life, and the ability to take
care of new generations. Dierent factors such
as production, availability, and transportation
of food, water quality, economic resources,
social and economic inequalities have shown an
important inuence on children nutrition level
(Montañez, 2017; Noble, 2017; Noble et al.,
2015; Silva, 2016). This issue traps people
into a circle that keeps malnutrition and delays
the development of countries. Characteristics
of poor homes and their members have been
strongly related to food security through family
income, size, composition and type of home
(i.e., whether there is a male or female as
household head), education level of individuals
and their job conditions, Dehollain, 1995).
Although food security became a major concern
for nutrition security and health worldwide,