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WHO European Childhood Obesity Surveillance Initiative: Impact of Type of Clothing Worn during Anthropometric Measurements and Timing of the Survey on Weight and Body Mass Index Outcome Measures in 6–9-Year-Old Children
Author(s) -
Trudy Wijnhoven,
J.M.A. van Raaij,
Angela Spinelli,
Agneta Yngve,
Lauren Lissner,
Igor Spiroski,
Victoria Farrugia Sant’Angelo,
Napoleón PérezFarinós,
Éva Martos,
Mirjam M. Heinen,
Marie Kunešová,
Ana Isabel Rito,
Ragnhild Hovengen,
Gregor Starc,
Vesselka Duleva,
Iveta Pudule,
Aušra Petrauskienė,
Lien Braeckevelt,
Maria Hassapidou,
João Breda,
P. van ’t Veer
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
epidemiology research international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-2972
pISSN - 2090-2980
DOI - 10.1155/2016/5130317
Subject(s) - body mass index , overweight , anthropometry , demography , obesity , medicine , data collection , childhood obesity , index (typography) , flexibility (engineering) , clothing , gerontology , pediatrics , geography , statistics , mathematics , pathology , sociology , world wide web , computer science , archaeology
Background. The World Health Organization European Childhood Obesity Surveillance Initiative (COSI) conducted examinations in 6–9-year-old children from 16 countries in the first two rounds of data collection. Allowing participating countries to adhere to their local legal requirements or adapt to other circumstances required developing a flexible protocol for anthropometric procedures. Objectives. (1) Review intercountry variation in types of clothing worn by children during weight and height measurements, clothes weight adjustments applied, timing of the survey, and duration of data collection; (2) assess the impact of the observed variation in these practices on the children’s weight or body mass index (BMI) outcome measures. Results. The relative difference between countries’ unadjusted and clothes-adjusted prevalence estimates for overweight was 0.3–11.5%; this figure was 1.4–33.3% for BMI-for-age Z-score values. Monthly fluctuations in mean BMI-for-age Z-score values did not show a systematic seasonal effect. The majority of the monthly BMI-for-age Z-score values did not differ statistically within a country; only 1–3 monthly values were statistically different within some countries. Conclusions. The findings of the present study suggest that the built-in flexibility in the COSI protocol concerning the data collection practices addressed in the paper can be kept and thus do not necessitate a revision of the COSI protocol.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

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