2015
DOI: 10.1017/s1368980015003316
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Length and height percentiles for children in the South-East Asian Nutrition Surveys (SEANUTS)

Abstract: Objective: Health and nutritional information for many countries in the South-East Asian region is either lacking or no longer up to date. The present study aimed to calculate length/height percentile values for the South-East Asian Nutrition Survey (SEANUTS) populations aged 0·5-12 years, examine the appropriateness of pooling SEANUTS data for calculating common length/height percentile values for all SEANUTS countries and whether these values differ from the WHO growth references. Design: Data on length/heig… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 24 publications
(39 reference statements)
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“…To achieve comparability of the anthropometric data collected in SEANUTS with those collected in the WHO Multicentre Growth Reference Study (MGRS), the sampling in SEANUTS followed the same approach as WHO ( 14 ) to exclude socio-economically disadvantaged and/or unhealthy children. The exclusion criteria applied in SEANUTS are presented in detail elsewhere ( 18 ) . Detailed information on the exclusion criteria used in the present study to identify eligible children in all participating countries is also provided elsewhere ( 18 ) .…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…To achieve comparability of the anthropometric data collected in SEANUTS with those collected in the WHO Multicentre Growth Reference Study (MGRS), the sampling in SEANUTS followed the same approach as WHO ( 14 ) to exclude socio-economically disadvantaged and/or unhealthy children. The exclusion criteria applied in SEANUTS are presented in detail elsewhere ( 18 ) . Detailed information on the exclusion criteria used in the present study to identify eligible children in all participating countries is also provided elsewhere ( 18 ) .…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The exclusion criteria applied in SEANUTS are presented in detail elsewhere ( 18 ) . Detailed information on the exclusion criteria used in the present study to identify eligible children in all participating countries is also provided elsewhere ( 18 ) . The application of the exclusion criteria resulted in a final pooled SEANUTS sample of 14 202 children having full data on anthropometric indices, age and sex, as previously reported ( 18 ) .…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Resting on a universal model of human growth, this approach assumes that after controlling for environmental inputs, population differences in height are sufficiently small that a single standard can be used to assess healthy growth across all populations. However, empirical studies across a wider range of countries have provided mixed support for this assumption (Christesen, Pedersen, Pournara, Petit, & Júlíusson, ; De Wilde, van Dommelen, Van Buuren, & Middelkoop, ; Graitcer & Gentry, ; Hui, Schooling, & Cowling, ; Karra, Subramanian, & Fink, ; Panagariya, ; Rojroongwasinkul et al, ; van Buuren & van Wouwe, ). Moreover, relatively stable, non‐environmental factors, including genetic variation, can also contribute to variation in height‐for‐age (Coffey, Deaton, Dreze, Dean, & Tarozzi, ; Davies, ; Goldstein & Tanner, ; RONA, ; Weedon, Lettre, Freathy, & Lindgren, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%