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PE2.1-2 | Failure to Thrive — Summary & Reflection
KEY TAKEAWAYS
Key takeaways from this module:
- FTT is a clinical sign — weight-for-age < −2 SD or crossing ≥2 centile lines. Always classify severity using weight-for-height AND MUAC.
- SAM = ANY of: weight-for-height < −3 SD, MUAC <11.5 cm, or bilateral pedal oedema. SAM carries high mortality without treatment.
- Non-organic FTT (>70% of cases) results from inadequate caloric intake due to feeding practices, psychosocial factors, poverty, or maternal depression. Organic FTT results from GI, cardiac, respiratory, renal, endocrine, CNS, infectious, or chromosomal causes.
- Assessment: structured dietary and social history + anthropometry (weight-for-age, weight-for-height, MUAC, head circumference) + targeted investigations. MUAC is the single best field tool for SAM.
- Management: SAM with complications → facility-based (F-75 stabilisation → F-100 rehabilitation); uncomplicated SAM → community RUTF. Address the underlying cause. Micronutrients: add iron only in the rehabilitation phase.
- Counselling: non-blaming, empathetic, practically actionable. Address feeding practices AND psychosocial barriers. Provide red flags for immediate return. Follow up with measurable goals.
REFLECT
Think back to the case in the opening scenario — the 18-month-old boy with an apathetic mother. Now that you have worked through this module:
- What was the most significant finding you might have missed if you had only plotted weight-for-age and not measured MUAC?
- How would your conversation with the mother be different from a conversation with a caregiver who is engaged and well-resourced?
- The module emphasised that maternal depression is often missed. How will you build a routine check for caregiver mental health into your clinical assessments of children with growth problems?
- Kolb's cycle of learning suggests that true understanding comes from reflecting on experience. After your next clinical encounter with a child who has a growth problem, how will you apply today's learning to your assessment approach?