TY  - JOUR
T1  - Nutritional Assessment of School-Age Children Attending Conventional Primary and Integrated Qur&#146;anic Schools in Kaduna
AU - Hassan, Aliyu AU - Onabanjo, O.O. AU - Oguntona, C.R.B. 
JO  - Research Journal of Medical Sciences
VL  - 6
IS  - 4
SP  - 187
EP  - 192
PY  - 2012
DA  - 2001/08/19
SN  - 1815-9346
DO  - rjmsci.2012.187.192
UR  - https://makhillpublications.co/view-article.php?doi=rjmsci.2012.187.192
KW  - school-age children
KW  -Nutritional assessment
KW  -conventional primary school
KW  -integrated Qur`anic school
KW  -deprivation
AB  - Under nutrition among school-age children have serious consequence on individual and national growth and development. The purpose of this study was to assess the nutritional status of 394 school-age children (7-11 years) attending Conventional Primary Schools (CPS) and Integrated Qur&#146;anic Schools (IQS) in Kaduna. A pretested questionnaire was used to generate information on their socio-economic, food intake pattern and anthropometric status. The mean energy (1861&plusmn;547.53 23 kcal), protein (32.16&plusmn;8.93 g), Vitamin A (795.48&plusmn;183.48 RE), iron (11.61&plusmn;4.02 mg), iodine (122.65&plusmn;130.35 mg), calcium (625.38&plusmn;212.57 g) and Vitamin C (28.09&plusmn;29.12 mg) intakes were lower for those in CPS compared to their counterparts in IQS facilities. Results showed that about 41.2% of the children were stunted been slightly higher in children attending IQS (9%) than those in CPS but the difference was no significant (p&gt;0.05). Underweight was also generally high (48.7%). There were more (24.6%) cases of overweight among CPS than IQS (22.0%) children and only 1% level of obesity was recorded. Malaria and helminthes infection was not significantly different (p&gt;0.05) among subjects attending CPS and IQS. Correlation between malnutrition and type of school, level of energy intake rate and mother&#146;s educational level showed no relationship (p = 0.05). Data on the prevalence and degree of malnutrition among school-age children attending both CPS and IQS sectors of education in Nigeria is limited.
ER  - 