Comparison of Body Mass Index and fat percentage criteria classification of 7–13 year-old rural boys in South Africa

Abstract Background The aim of this paper was to investigate whether BMI and fat percentage classification criteria, would classify a sample of 7–13 year old boys from a rural background in similar nutritional categories. Methods A cross-sectional study with a stratified random sampling included 601...

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Main Authors: Maya van Gent, Anita Pienaar, Habib Noorbhai
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-11-01
Series:BMC Pediatrics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12887-020-02419-9
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spelling doaj-f45f0b64603b407e87ea073959f70e3a2020-11-25T04:02:49ZengBMCBMC Pediatrics1471-24312020-11-012011810.1186/s12887-020-02419-9Comparison of Body Mass Index and fat percentage criteria classification of 7–13 year-old rural boys in South AfricaMaya van Gent0Anita Pienaar1Habib Noorbhai2Department of Human Movement Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Fort HareSchool for Human Movement Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, North West UniversityDepartment of Sport and Movement Studies, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of JohannesburgAbstract Background The aim of this paper was to investigate whether BMI and fat percentage classification criteria, would classify a sample of 7–13 year old boys from a rural background in similar nutritional categories. Methods A cross-sectional study with a stratified random sampling included 601 rural boys (7–13 years old). Fat percentage criteria classification and BMI were calculated and compared. Maturity status, and age at peak height velocity (PHV) were indirectly determined. Statistical techniques included descriptive statistics, Pearson product correlation coefficients, the Kappa agreement test and the McNemar’s test. The level of statistical significance was set at p ≤ 0.05. Results All age groups presented with statistically significant high correlations between BMI and fat percentage, and low to medium correlations between fat percentage and maturity age (MA). Measurement of agreement between BMI and fat percentage classifications showed poor to fair agreements for all age groups, with the exception of the eight-year old group which presented a moderate agreement. Conclusions Classifications based on BMI and fat percentage, results in different classifications for the same population. Until further research has been done to determine the best classification for nutritional status, it is recommended that both classification methods be used for more accurate classification of nutritional status.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12887-020-02419-9AnthropometryChildrenBody CompositionSouth Africa
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maya van Gent
Anita Pienaar
Habib Noorbhai
spellingShingle Maya van Gent
Anita Pienaar
Habib Noorbhai
Comparison of Body Mass Index and fat percentage criteria classification of 7–13 year-old rural boys in South Africa
BMC Pediatrics
Anthropometry
Children
Body Composition
South Africa
author_facet Maya van Gent
Anita Pienaar
Habib Noorbhai
author_sort Maya van Gent
title Comparison of Body Mass Index and fat percentage criteria classification of 7–13 year-old rural boys in South Africa
title_short Comparison of Body Mass Index and fat percentage criteria classification of 7–13 year-old rural boys in South Africa
title_full Comparison of Body Mass Index and fat percentage criteria classification of 7–13 year-old rural boys in South Africa
title_fullStr Comparison of Body Mass Index and fat percentage criteria classification of 7–13 year-old rural boys in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of Body Mass Index and fat percentage criteria classification of 7–13 year-old rural boys in South Africa
title_sort comparison of body mass index and fat percentage criteria classification of 7–13 year-old rural boys in south africa
publisher BMC
series BMC Pediatrics
issn 1471-2431
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Abstract Background The aim of this paper was to investigate whether BMI and fat percentage classification criteria, would classify a sample of 7–13 year old boys from a rural background in similar nutritional categories. Methods A cross-sectional study with a stratified random sampling included 601 rural boys (7–13 years old). Fat percentage criteria classification and BMI were calculated and compared. Maturity status, and age at peak height velocity (PHV) were indirectly determined. Statistical techniques included descriptive statistics, Pearson product correlation coefficients, the Kappa agreement test and the McNemar’s test. The level of statistical significance was set at p ≤ 0.05. Results All age groups presented with statistically significant high correlations between BMI and fat percentage, and low to medium correlations between fat percentage and maturity age (MA). Measurement of agreement between BMI and fat percentage classifications showed poor to fair agreements for all age groups, with the exception of the eight-year old group which presented a moderate agreement. Conclusions Classifications based on BMI and fat percentage, results in different classifications for the same population. Until further research has been done to determine the best classification for nutritional status, it is recommended that both classification methods be used for more accurate classification of nutritional status.
topic Anthropometry
Children
Body Composition
South Africa
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12887-020-02419-9
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