1. Dressed or undressed? How to measure children's body weight in overweight surveillance?
- Author
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Paola Nardone, Noemi Bevilacqua, Angela Spinelli, Romana Roccaldo, Anna Lamberti, Giovanni Baglio, Laura Censi, and Veronica Angelini
- Subjects
Male ,Body Weight Measurement ,Estimated Weight ,Rome ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Overweight ,Body weight ,Body Mass Index ,Clothing ,Reference Values ,Humans ,Medicine ,Obesity ,Child ,Schools ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Anthropometry ,medicine.disease ,Checklist ,Lazio region ,Population Surveillance ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Demography - Abstract
ObjectiveTo simplify body weight measurement and, particularly, to encourage children and their parents to participate in the Italian nutritional surveillance system OKkio alla SALUTE, children were measured with clothes and then the weight was corrected for the estimated weight of the clothes. In the present study we compared the children's weight measured in underwear, as recommended by the WHO (WWHO), with that obtained using the OKkio alla SALUTE protocol (WOK) and investigated how the latter affects the calculation of BMI and the assessment of overweight and obesity prevalence.DesignWeight (twice in close sequence, with and without clothing) and height were measured. A checklist was used to describe the type of clothing worn. The estimated weight of clothing was subtracted from the WOK. BMI was calculated considering both values of weight and height; ponderal status was defined using both the International Obesity Task Force and WHO BMI cut-offs.SettingThirty-seven third grade classes of thirteen primary schools in Rome and in two towns in the Lazio Region were recruited.SubjectsThe anthropometric measurements were taken on 524 children aged 8–9 years.ResultsThe error in the calculation of BMI from WOKwas very low, 0·005 kg/m2(95 % CI −0·185, 0·195 kg/m2); the agreement between the percentages of overweight (not including obesity) and obese children calculated with the two methods was very close to 1 (κ= 0·98).ConclusionsThe error in BMI and in nutritional classification can be considered minor in a surveillance system for monitoring overweight/obesity, but eases the procedure for measuring children.
- Published
- 2013
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