Declining growth status of indigenous Siberian children
in post-Soviet Russia
William R. Leonard, Gary J. Spencer, Victoria A. Galloway, and Ludmilla Osipova
Human health status in Russia has declined sharply over the
last decade. The massive social changes that have taken place since the fall
of the Soviet Union have resulted in increasing morbidity and mortality rates.
However, relatively little information is available on the changes in health
and dis-ease patterns of Russia’s many indigenous populations. The present study
ex-amines anthropometric indices of growth status of young children (< 6 years;
n = 155), a sensitive index of population health, in three indigenous Evenki
communities of Central Siberia between 1991 and 1995. Children of the 1995 sample
are significantly shorter, lighter, and leaner than those measured in 1991 and
1992. In 1995, 61% of Evenki children were growth stunted (height-for- age z
score < –2.0), as compared to 34% in 1991 and 1992 (p < 0.001). Similarly, the
prevalence of low weight-for-age (weight-for-age z score < –2.0) children in
the 1995 sample was more than double that of the 1991/92 sample (43% vs. 18%;
p < 0.001), and the prevalence of low weight-for-height (weight-for-height z
score < –2.0; “wasting”) increased from 2% to 17% (p < 0.001). The levels of
growth retardation observed in 1995 are comparable to those seen among impoverished
third-world populations. Additionally, the de-clines in linear growth appear
to be particularly pronounced in girls, raising the question of whether there
may be differential treatment of boys and girls under these conditions of stress.
Overall, these results indicate that increased economic marginalization is having
a profound effect on the health and well-being of indigenous Siberian groups.
Further work is necessary to determine the proximate causes of the disturbing
trends, and the potential solutions and interventions.
Human Biology 74(2): 197–209.
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