51. Children in countries with a high incidence of HIV/AIDS : 1400895.
51. Children in countries with a high incidence of HIV/AIDS are at greater risk of malnutrition.
52. Mothers with HIV cannot pass the virus to their infants through breast milk.
53. The elderly have reduced kilocalorie needs and thus are not at high risk for malnutrition.
54. Immobility is a risk factor for food insecurity among the older adult population.
55. Undernutrition can cause attention problems in children.
56. Brain development in children is rarely affected by nutritional status.
57. Growth stunting in children, though serious, can usually be reversed.
58. Physical wasting is sometimes referred to as acute malnutrition.
59. In developing countries between 2000 and 2006, around a third of children under 5 years of age were physically stunted from malnutrition.
60. Vitamin D deficiency is the most common micronutrient deficiency among malnourished children worldwide.
51. Children in countries with a high incidence of HIV/AIDS : 1400895