The legacy of a standard of normality in child nutrition research

Anthropometric evaluation of children is among the most vital and widely used instruments of public health and clinical medicine. Anthropometry is used for establishing norms, identifying variations, and monitoring development. Yet the accurate assessment of physical growth and development of childr...

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Main Author: Austin Sandler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-09-01
Series:SSM: Population Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352827321001403
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spelling doaj-ea150d21ea214b12b1b199f7ace12a3d2021-10-01T05:02:33ZengElsevierSSM: Population Health2352-82732021-09-0115100865The legacy of a standard of normality in child nutrition researchAustin Sandler0Department of Geographical Sciences, University of Maryland, 2181 LeFrak Hall, 7251 Preinkert Dr, College Park, MD, 20740, USAAnthropometric evaluation of children is among the most vital and widely used instruments of public health and clinical medicine. Anthropometry is used for establishing norms, identifying variations, and monitoring development. Yet the accurate assessment of physical growth and development of children remains a perpetually beleaguering subject. This paper focuses on the evolution of anthropometry as a science and its associated measurements, indices, indicators, standards, references, and best practices. This paper seeks to clarify aspects of the assessment of child growth, explores the historical trajectory of the study of anthropometry and its contemporary limitations, and contributes to the debate surrounding references and standards, and the applicability of international anthropometric standards to an individual's health. Among its findings is a surprisingly nonlinear and contested record of events, up to and including leading contemporary practices and datasets. It contextualizes the legacy of child malnutrition studies in a broad framework, including the linkage between the early eugenics movement and contemporary notions of a “normal” child, the interpersonal and intuitional competition to become the preeminent child growth authority, the obfuscated distinction between reference growth charts and standards of growth, and the hidden consequences of universal growth standards that no longer reflect any observable populations.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352827321001403AnthropometryChild nutritionNormalityReferences and standardsSamples and populations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Austin Sandler
spellingShingle Austin Sandler
The legacy of a standard of normality in child nutrition research
SSM: Population Health
Anthropometry
Child nutrition
Normality
References and standards
Samples and populations
author_facet Austin Sandler
author_sort Austin Sandler
title The legacy of a standard of normality in child nutrition research
title_short The legacy of a standard of normality in child nutrition research
title_full The legacy of a standard of normality in child nutrition research
title_fullStr The legacy of a standard of normality in child nutrition research
title_full_unstemmed The legacy of a standard of normality in child nutrition research
title_sort legacy of a standard of normality in child nutrition research
publisher Elsevier
series SSM: Population Health
issn 2352-8273
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Anthropometric evaluation of children is among the most vital and widely used instruments of public health and clinical medicine. Anthropometry is used for establishing norms, identifying variations, and monitoring development. Yet the accurate assessment of physical growth and development of children remains a perpetually beleaguering subject. This paper focuses on the evolution of anthropometry as a science and its associated measurements, indices, indicators, standards, references, and best practices. This paper seeks to clarify aspects of the assessment of child growth, explores the historical trajectory of the study of anthropometry and its contemporary limitations, and contributes to the debate surrounding references and standards, and the applicability of international anthropometric standards to an individual's health. Among its findings is a surprisingly nonlinear and contested record of events, up to and including leading contemporary practices and datasets. It contextualizes the legacy of child malnutrition studies in a broad framework, including the linkage between the early eugenics movement and contemporary notions of a “normal” child, the interpersonal and intuitional competition to become the preeminent child growth authority, the obfuscated distinction between reference growth charts and standards of growth, and the hidden consequences of universal growth standards that no longer reflect any observable populations.
topic Anthropometry
Child nutrition
Normality
References and standards
Samples and populations
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352827321001403
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