Does measurement technique explain the mismatch between European head size and WHO charts?

作者:Wright Charlotte M*; Bremner Morven; Lip Stefanie; Symonds Joseph D
来源:Archives of Disease in Childhood, 2017, 102(7): 639-643.
DOI:10.1136/archdischild-2016-311888

摘要

Objective To test whether different measuring techniques produce systematic differences in head size that could explain the large head circumferences found in Northern European children compared with the WHO standard. Design Cross-sectional observational study. Setting Scotland, UK. Patients Study 1: 68 healthy children aged 0.4-18 months from mother and baby groups and a medical students teaching session. Study 2: 81 children aged 0.4 to 25 months from hospital wards and neonatal follow-up clinics. Interventions Study 1: heads measured with plastic tape using both the WHO tight and UK loose technique. Study 2: heads measured using WHO research technique and a metal measuring tape and compared with routinely acquired measurements. Main outcome measures Mean difference in head z-scores using WHO standard between the two methods. Results The tight technique resulted in a mean (95% CI) z-score difference of 0.41 (0.27 to 0.54, p<0.001) in study 1 and 0.44 (0.36 to 0.53, p<0.001) in study 2. However, the mean WHO measurements in the healthy infants still produced a mean z-score that was two-third of a centile space (0.54 SD (0.28 to 0.79) p<0.001) above the 50th centile. Conclusion The WHO measurement techniques produced significantly lower measures of head size, but average healthy Scottish children still had larger heads than the WHO standard using this method.

  • 出版日期2017-7

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