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Accuracy of parental estimate of child's weight in a paediatric emergency department
Author(s) -
Foster Mieke,
Tagg Andrew,
Klim Sharon,
Kelly AnneMaree
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
emergency medicine australasia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.602
H-Index - 52
eISSN - 1742-6723
pISSN - 1742-6731
DOI - 10.1111/1742-6723.13318
Subject(s) - medicine , confidence interval , weight estimation , emergency department , triage , pediatrics , estimation , demography , observational study , ethnic group , statistics , emergency medicine , mathematics , management , psychiatry , sociology , anthropology , economics
Objectives To determine the accuracy of using parental estimate of a child's weight compared to actual weight in a paediatric emergency setting. Methods Prospective, observational study. Age, weight and height data were collected from children aged 1 month up to 11 years with an Australian Triage score of 3 or higher. This was compared with a parent weight estimate. Analysis is descriptive. Results A total of 450 children were studied with a mean age of 4 years 4 months. A total of 85.3% of parents were willing to provide a weight estimate ( n = 384). The mean difference between the parent estimate (where provided) and the actual weight was 0.33 kg (measured weight > estimated; 95% confidence interval [CI] −6.9 kg to +7.6 kg). There was 75% agreement within 10% of the measured weight (95% CI 71–79%) and 92% agreement within 20% of the measured weight (95% CI 89–95%). Weight was more commonly underestimated than overestimated. Children of Polynesian/Pacific ethnicity were less likely to have an accurate parental weight estimation. Conclusions Parent estimate is an accurate weight estimation method when parents are willing to give an estimate. There is ethnic variation in accuracy that should be taken into account when applying this method.