Abstract :
Objectives: To describe the anthropometric and physical status of a sample of elderly women in rural
Ghana and examine factors associated with a low body mass index (BMI). Design: a cross-sectional survey.
Setting: Two rural villages in ashanti Region, Ghana. Participants: Fifty-nine elderly women aged 60 to 92
years. Measurements: The weight, height, half armspan and mid-upper arm circumference (MUaC) of each
woman was measured; body mass index (BMI) and body mass for armspan (BMa) were calculated. The state of
each woman’s teeth and visual acuity was assessed. Data on food security, eating habits and socio-economic
status were collected by questionnaire. Results: 41% (95%CI 27.8, 53.6) of women were underweight and 16.9%
(95%CI 7.18, 26.8) were overweight or obese. Factors associated with a low BMI (<18.5 kg/m2) were: age
(P=0.001), chewing tobacco (P=0.002), drinking alcohol (P=0.012), a visual acuity score of <30% (P=0.038),
using a walking aid (P=0.016) and the number of children who gave the women cash (P=0.005). BMI was
strongly positively correlated with BMa (r=0.999, P<0.001) and with MUaC (r=0.91, P<0.001), and a BMI of
18.5 was equivalent to a MUaC of about 23cm. Conclusion: Elderly women in Ghana with poor teeth and
eyesight are at risk of undernutrition. Measurements of MUaC, which is simple, or BMa, which is based on
weight and half armspan and is more easily measured and calculated than height and BMI, could be used to
identify undernourished elderly women in rural africa.
Keywords :
elderly women , anthropometry. , Africa , Ghana