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Original scientific paper

Impact of War on Growth Patterns in School Children in Croatia

Helga Jovanović
Živka Prebeg
Ivana Stanić
Gorka Vuletić


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Abstract

The objective of this paper is to present the growth patterns of school children in
Osijek – the city which was exposed to severe attacks during the aggression on Croatia.
The mean height and weight of Osijek schoolchildren aged 7 to 18 and the menarcheal
age in girls in academic year 1995/96 were compared to the analogous data collected in
1980/81. The secular changes in height were heterogeneous. In older age groups from
12 in girls and 13 in boys, the mean height in 1995/96 increased markedly, whereas
from 9 to 11 or 12, changes were undulating. In the youngest groups – at the age of 7 in
both genders, and at 8 in boys, negative changes were observed. Markedly smaller height
in this cohort was still pronounced in 1999/2000 when these children reached the age of
11. However, one year later (2000/01), at the age of 12, boys and girls caught up with
their peers in the previous generations. These children during the war were approximately
at the age of 2.5 to 4, a period when growth patterns are highly sensitive to adverse
environmental influences. It might be possible that the emotional stress caused by
a change of environment and separation from home, contributed to the deceleration of
growth rate, i.e. the smaller height in a large part of childhood.

Keywords

child growth; secular changes; impact of war

Hrčak ID:

28177

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/28177

Publication date:

15.12.2003.

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