1. The Similarity Degree of the Anthropometric and Body Composition Variables of Brazilian and Mozambican Schoolchildren: A New Approach Using the Smoothed Jaccard Index Surface.
- Author
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Pacheco, André Luiz de Góes, Bocanegra, Willian Motta, Ferreira, Élida Karina de Lira, dos Santos, Rayssa Temudo, Simões, Patrícia Miller, Malinga, Eulálio, Guiliche, Euclides da Conceição, Isaías, Arsénio Fernando José, Nobre, Isabele Góes, Silva, João Henrique da Costa, Silva, Wylla Tatiana Ferreira e, Padrón-Hernandez, Eduardo, Pirola, Luciano, Henrique, Rafael dos Santos, and Leandro, Carol Góis
- Subjects
BODY mass index ,DATA analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,BODY composition ,BODY weight ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,BRAZILIANS ,STATURE ,WAIST circumference ,SCHOOL children ,RESEARCH ,LEAN body mass ,RURAL conditions ,METROPOLITAN areas ,ONE-way analysis of variance ,STATISTICS ,ANTHROPOMETRY ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DATA analysis software ,NONPARAMETRIC statistics ,RELIABILITY (Personality trait) ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Background/Objectives: Brazil and Mozambique face similar socioeconomic challenges, including common indicators of undernutrition and overnutrition among children. This study evaluated the similarity degree of the anthropometric and body composition variables of Brazilian and Mozambican children by using the Jaccard index. Methods: A total of 1831 children of both genders aged 7–10 years from three Brazilian cities (Recife, Vitoria de Santo Antao, and Lagoa do Carro) and three Mozambican cities (Maputo, Boane, and Inhambane) participated in this study. Anthropometric (height, body mass, and waist circumference) and body composition (body fat percentage [%BF], lean mass, and fat mass) variables were measured and the Smoothed Jaccard Index Surface (SJIS) was used to evaluate the similarity degree. Results: Brazilian children were taller and heavier and had a higher %BF and fat mass than Mozambican children. Children living in urban areas were taller than those living in rural zones in both countries. Brazilian and Mozambican children showed high similarity only between %BF and lean mass. Children from Recife and Maputo had high similarities among waist circumference, body mass, fat mass, height, and %BF. Finally, a high SJIS degree was observed among height and %BF for schoolchildren from rural and urban zones. Conclusion: Brazilian and Mozambican children exhibit differences in growth characteristics but a high degree of similarity when children from rural and urban zones are compared. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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