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Relationship between physical growth and motor development in the WHO Child Growth Standards
Author(s) -
Onis Mercedes
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
acta pædiatrica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.772
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1651-2227
pISSN - 0803-5253
DOI - 10.1111/j.1651-2227.2006.tb02380.x
Subject(s) - milestone , gross motor skill , medicine , sitting , developmental milestone , motor skill , demography , psychomotor learning , population , standard score , physical therapy , pediatrics , gerontology , cognition , statistics , environmental health , mathematics , archaeology , pathology , psychiatry , sociology , history
Abstract Aim: To examine relationships among physical growth indicators and ages of achievement of six gross motor milestones in the WHO Child Growth Standards population. Methods: Gross motor development assessments were performed longitudinally on the 816 children included in the WHO Child Growth Standards. Six milestones (sitting without support, hands‐and‐knees crawling, standing with assistance, walking with assistance, standing alone, walking alone) were assessed monthly from 4 until 12 mo of age and bimonthly thereafter until children could walk alone or reached 24 mo. Failure time models were used 1) to examine associations between specified ages of motor milestone achievement and attained growth z scores and 2) to quantify these relationships as delays or accelerations in ages of milestone achievement. Results: Statistically significant associations were noted between ages of achievement of sitting without support and attained weight‐for‐age, weight‐for‐length and BMI‐for‐age z scores. An increase of one unit z score in these indicators was associated with 3 to 6 d acceleration in the respective achievement age. Statistically significant associations also were noted between various milestone achievement ages and growth when 3‐ or 6‐mo and birth length‐for‐age z scores were entered jointly in the failure time models. In these analyses, one unit z‐score increase in length‐for‐age was associated with 1 to 3 d delay in the respective achievement age. Conclusion: Sporadic, significant associations were observed between gross motor development and some physical growth indicators, but these were quantitatively of limited practical significance. These results suggest that, in healthy populations, the attainment of these six gross motor milestones is largely independent of variations in physical growth.

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