Practices of growth assessment in children: Is anthropometric measurement important?

Assessing and monitoring growth is common practice in pediatric care, and health professionals accept routine growth monitoring in children as a standard component of community child health services throughout the world. In clinical level, by these activities one can detect and intervene while growt...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jose RL Batubara
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Indonesian Pediatric Society Publishing House 2016-10-01
Series:Paediatrica Indonesiana
Subjects:
Online Access:https://paediatricaindonesiana.org/index.php/paediatrica-indonesiana/article/view/821
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spelling doaj-d5ea169fa2c84cffabeb86ff46160a832020-11-25T01:40:36ZengIndonesian Pediatric Society Publishing HousePaediatrica Indonesiana0030-93112338-476X2016-10-014541455310.14238/pi45.4.2005.145-53684Practices of growth assessment in children: Is anthropometric measurement important?Jose RL BatubaraAssessing and monitoring growth is common practice in pediatric care, and health professionals accept routine growth monitoring in children as a standard component of community child health services throughout the world. In clinical level, by these activities one can detect and intervene while growth faltering happens. The internationally recommended way to assess malnutrition at population level is to take anthropometric measurements. In developed countries, growth monitoring is an intrinsic part of ‘well child’ clinics. As growth is a proxy for child health, the child who grows well is generally healthy and illness in a child is usually associated with poor growth. Interpretation of child growth is based on anthropometric indicators established in a reference population with cut-off points to differentiate under- and overnutrition, short stature or tall stature, proportionate or disproportionate growth. Practices of growth monitoring consist of regularly measuring the weight and height of children, then plotting the information on a growth chart to make abnormal growth visible. When growth is abnormal, the health worker does something in concert with the family and as a result of these actions the child receives appropriate social or medical support, his or her nutrition improves, or a serious condition is diagnosed earlier.https://paediatricaindonesiana.org/index.php/paediatrica-indonesiana/article/view/821Practices of growth assessmentchildrenanthropometric measurement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jose RL Batubara
spellingShingle Jose RL Batubara
Practices of growth assessment in children: Is anthropometric measurement important?
Paediatrica Indonesiana
Practices of growth assessment
children
anthropometric measurement
author_facet Jose RL Batubara
author_sort Jose RL Batubara
title Practices of growth assessment in children: Is anthropometric measurement important?
title_short Practices of growth assessment in children: Is anthropometric measurement important?
title_full Practices of growth assessment in children: Is anthropometric measurement important?
title_fullStr Practices of growth assessment in children: Is anthropometric measurement important?
title_full_unstemmed Practices of growth assessment in children: Is anthropometric measurement important?
title_sort practices of growth assessment in children: is anthropometric measurement important?
publisher Indonesian Pediatric Society Publishing House
series Paediatrica Indonesiana
issn 0030-9311
2338-476X
publishDate 2016-10-01
description Assessing and monitoring growth is common practice in pediatric care, and health professionals accept routine growth monitoring in children as a standard component of community child health services throughout the world. In clinical level, by these activities one can detect and intervene while growth faltering happens. The internationally recommended way to assess malnutrition at population level is to take anthropometric measurements. In developed countries, growth monitoring is an intrinsic part of ‘well child’ clinics. As growth is a proxy for child health, the child who grows well is generally healthy and illness in a child is usually associated with poor growth. Interpretation of child growth is based on anthropometric indicators established in a reference population with cut-off points to differentiate under- and overnutrition, short stature or tall stature, proportionate or disproportionate growth. Practices of growth monitoring consist of regularly measuring the weight and height of children, then plotting the information on a growth chart to make abnormal growth visible. When growth is abnormal, the health worker does something in concert with the family and as a result of these actions the child receives appropriate social or medical support, his or her nutrition improves, or a serious condition is diagnosed earlier.
topic Practices of growth assessment
children
anthropometric measurement
url https://paediatricaindonesiana.org/index.php/paediatrica-indonesiana/article/view/821
work_keys_str_mv AT joserlbatubara practicesofgrowthassessmentinchildrenisanthropometricmeasurementimportant
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