Correct Answer: A. Weight for height less than – 3 SD
Severe acute malnutrition (SAM) is defined by weight-for-height (WFH) < −3 SD according to WHO 2009 criteria. This anthropometric index is the gold standard for identifying acute malnutrition because height is relatively preserved in acute conditions, making WFH a sensitive marker of recent nutritional deficit. The −3 SD cutoff (approximately 70% of median WFH) identifies children at highest risk of mortality and morbidity who require urgent therapeutic intervention. In Indian pediatric practice (IAP guidelines, RNTCP protocols), WFH <−3 SD mandates immediate admission, micronutrient supplementation, and intensive management. The distinction between acute (WFH-based) and chronic (height-for-age-based) malnutrition is critical: SAM is primarily acute, reflecting recent inadequate intake or infection, whereas stunting reflects chronic deprivation. WFH captures the acuity and reversibility of malnutrition, making it the discriminating parameter for SAM diagnosis and severity stratification in Indian community and hospital settings.
Why the other options are wrong
B. Weight for age less than – 2 SD — Weight-for-age (WFA) <−2 SD defines underweight, not SAM. WFA is a composite index that conflates both acute and chronic malnutrition, making it non-specific. SAM requires WFH <−3 SD. WFA <−2 SD is used to screen for malnutrition broadly but cannot distinguish acute from chronic forms—a critical distinction in Indian pediatric triage where acute cases need emergency intervention. C. Weight for age less than + 3 SD — This option is nonsensical: '+3 SD' above the median would indicate overweight/obesity, not malnutrition. The '+' sign is a distractor. Malnutrition is defined by negative SD scores (below the median). This is an NBE trap exploiting careless reading of the sign convention in anthropometric indices. D. Weight for height less than + 2 SD — Again, '+2 SD' indicates above-median WFH (overweight), not malnutrition. The correct threshold for SAM is WFH <−3 SD, not <+2 SD. This option repeats the sign-reversal trap, testing whether candidates understand that malnutrition is defined by negative (below-median) anthropometric scores.
High-Yield Facts
- SAM (WHO 2009) is defined as WFH <−3 SD or MUAC <115 mm in children 6–59 months; WFH is the primary criterion in Indian pediatric practice.
- WFH vs. WFA: WFH detects acute malnutrition (recent onset, reversible); WFA detects underweight (composite of acute + chronic); HAZ <−2 SD detects stunting (chronic malnutrition).
- SAM mortality risk is 5–10 times higher than in non-malnourished children; requires immediate admission, therapeutic feeding, micronutrient repletion, and infection screening per IAP/WHO guidelines.
- MUAC (Mid-Upper Arm Circumference) <115 mm is an alternative SAM criterion, field-friendly in Indian rural settings, and does not require height measurement.
- Moderate acute malnutrition (MAM) is defined as WFH −2 to −3 SD; requires outpatient management with supplementary nutrition and monitoring.
Mnemonics
SAM vs. MAM vs. Underweight SAM: WFH <−3 SD (acute, severe, mortality risk). MAM: WFH −2 to −3 SD (acute, moderate). Underweight: WFA <−2 SD (composite). Stunting: HAZ <−2 SD (chronic). Remember: WFH = acute, HAZ = chronic, WFA = mixed. The −3 SD Rule SAM = WFH <−3 SD ≈ 70% of median weight for that height. This cutoff identifies children needing emergency nutrition rehabilitation. In Indian pediatric units, WFH <−3 SD = automatic admission + therapeutic feeding protocol.
NBE Trap
NBE exploits confusion between WFH (acute) and WFA (composite) indices, and reverses the sign convention (+3 SD vs. −3 SD) to trap candidates who skim options. Students familiar only with "underweight" (WFA <−2 SD) may miss that SAM specifically requires WFH <−3 SD.
Clinical Pearl
In Indian pediatric practice, a child presenting with visible wasting (loose skin folds, prominent ribs) and recent weight loss is suspected SAM. Plotting WFH on a WHO growth chart <−3 SD line confirms diagnosis and triggers immediate admission, therapeutic milk feeds (F-75, F-100), and micronutrient supplementation—delaying this classification costs lives in resource-limited settings.
_Reference: OP Ghai Essentials of Pediatrics Ch. 5 (Nutrition & Malnutrition); IAP Guidelines on Management of Severe Acute Malnutrition; WHO 2009 Child Growth Standards_