Background: Classification of infants into low birth weight (LBW, \u3c2500g) or very low birth weight (VLBW, \u3c2000 g) categories is a crucial step in targeting interventions to high-risk infants. Objective: To compare the validity of chest circumference and foot length as surrogate anthropometric measures for the identification of LBW and VLBW infants. Subjects and setting: Newborn infants (n = 1640) born between March and June 2004 in 30 Village Development Committees of Sarlahi district, Nepal. Design: Chest circumference, foot length and weight (SECA 727, precise to 2 g) of newborns were measured within 72 h after birth. The sensitivity, specificity and predictive values for a range of cutoff points of the anthropometric measures were...
Perinatal mortality remains one of the factors leading to child mortality, even for crude death as a...
OBJECTIVE: To investigate foot length (FL), chest circumference (CHC) and mid-upper arm circumferenc...
Objective: The neonatal mortality rate (NMR) continues to remain quite high, one important cause bei...
Background: The study of anthropometric measurements of newborns at birth allows rapid evaluation of...
Background The majority of infants who die in the neonatal period are born with a low birth weight (...
Abstract Background Low birth weight (Birth weight < 2500 g) is a leading cause of prenatal and neon...
In developing countries, where about 75 % of births occur at home or in the community, logistic prob...
Background: Various anthropometric parameters have been studied so far to find the best possible sur...
BACKGROUND: The evaluation of tools to accurately identify low birth weight (LBW) and/or premature n...
The evaluation of tools to accurately identify low birth weight (LBW) and/or premature newborns in r...
Background: About 60–80% of neonatal deaths are due to low birth weight (LBW <2500 g) in developi...
Background: The majority of the neonates in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) would be on resp...
Introduction: Birth weight is an important parameter to assess the overall wellbeing of newborn. In...
Background The evaluation of tools to accurately identify low birth weight (LBW) and/or premature ne...
AbstractBackgroundParticularly in developing countries, lower birthweight may be associated with hig...
Perinatal mortality remains one of the factors leading to child mortality, even for crude death as a...
OBJECTIVE: To investigate foot length (FL), chest circumference (CHC) and mid-upper arm circumferenc...
Objective: The neonatal mortality rate (NMR) continues to remain quite high, one important cause bei...
Background: The study of anthropometric measurements of newborns at birth allows rapid evaluation of...
Background The majority of infants who die in the neonatal period are born with a low birth weight (...
Abstract Background Low birth weight (Birth weight < 2500 g) is a leading cause of prenatal and neon...
In developing countries, where about 75 % of births occur at home or in the community, logistic prob...
Background: Various anthropometric parameters have been studied so far to find the best possible sur...
BACKGROUND: The evaluation of tools to accurately identify low birth weight (LBW) and/or premature n...
The evaluation of tools to accurately identify low birth weight (LBW) and/or premature newborns in r...
Background: About 60–80% of neonatal deaths are due to low birth weight (LBW <2500 g) in developi...
Background: The majority of the neonates in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) would be on resp...
Introduction: Birth weight is an important parameter to assess the overall wellbeing of newborn. In...
Background The evaluation of tools to accurately identify low birth weight (LBW) and/or premature ne...
AbstractBackgroundParticularly in developing countries, lower birthweight may be associated with hig...
Perinatal mortality remains one of the factors leading to child mortality, even for crude death as a...
OBJECTIVE: To investigate foot length (FL), chest circumference (CHC) and mid-upper arm circumferenc...
Objective: The neonatal mortality rate (NMR) continues to remain quite high, one important cause bei...