Objectives: The 2006 WHO growth charts were created to provide an international standard for optimal growth, based on healthy, breastfed populations, but it has been suggested that Northern European children fit them poorly. This study uses infant weight data spanning 50 years to determine how well-nourished preschool children from different eras fit the WHO standard, and discuss the implications of deviations. Design: Four longitudinal datasets from the UK and one from Finland were used comprising over 8000 children born between1959 and 2003. Weights from birth to 2 years were converted to age-sex-adjusted Z scores using the WHO standard and summarised using Generalized Additive Models for Location, Scale and Shape. Results: Weights showed...
AIM: The World Health Organization (WHO) published universal growth standards for children below fiv...
Background: The adoption in May 2009 by the UK of the WHO 2006 standard necessitated the provision o...
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization (WHO) released new Child Growth Standards in 2006 to repla...
Objectives: The 2006 WHO growth charts were created to provide an international standard for optimal...
Abstract Objectives To compare growth patterns and estimates of malnutrition based on the World Heal...
The rates and patterns of growth in weight of European and North American infants have changed over ...
Objective This research evaluated (1) differences in body size and composition of Tasmanian infants ...
Objective: This research evaluated (1) differences in body size and composition of Tasmanian infants...
The evaluation of child growth trajectories and the interventions designed to improve child health a...
Background: Several concerns have been raised by World Health Organization (WHO) expert groups regar...
Abstract Objective To describe the worldwide implementation of the WHO Child Growth Standards (‘WHO ...
Abstract Background The new growth charts in the UK, the UK-WHO charts, comprise prescriptive data f...
Background: The World Health Organization (WHO) recently developed growth standards to overcome the ...
Background: The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends exclusive breast-feeding during the first...
Background: Growth charts are an essential clinical tool for evaluating a child's health and develop...
AIM: The World Health Organization (WHO) published universal growth standards for children below fiv...
Background: The adoption in May 2009 by the UK of the WHO 2006 standard necessitated the provision o...
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization (WHO) released new Child Growth Standards in 2006 to repla...
Objectives: The 2006 WHO growth charts were created to provide an international standard for optimal...
Abstract Objectives To compare growth patterns and estimates of malnutrition based on the World Heal...
The rates and patterns of growth in weight of European and North American infants have changed over ...
Objective This research evaluated (1) differences in body size and composition of Tasmanian infants ...
Objective: This research evaluated (1) differences in body size and composition of Tasmanian infants...
The evaluation of child growth trajectories and the interventions designed to improve child health a...
Background: Several concerns have been raised by World Health Organization (WHO) expert groups regar...
Abstract Objective To describe the worldwide implementation of the WHO Child Growth Standards (‘WHO ...
Abstract Background The new growth charts in the UK, the UK-WHO charts, comprise prescriptive data f...
Background: The World Health Organization (WHO) recently developed growth standards to overcome the ...
Background: The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends exclusive breast-feeding during the first...
Background: Growth charts are an essential clinical tool for evaluating a child's health and develop...
AIM: The World Health Organization (WHO) published universal growth standards for children below fiv...
Background: The adoption in May 2009 by the UK of the WHO 2006 standard necessitated the provision o...
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization (WHO) released new Child Growth Standards in 2006 to repla...