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Using the new UK-WHO growth charts
110
Citations
15
References
2010
Year
NeonatologyNew ChartsAnthropometric IndicatorEconomic GrowthProductivityBody CompositionEconomic AnalysisBiostatisticsPrenatal CareWho DatasetPublic HealthStatisticsNorm Uk ChildrenEconomicsPopulation StudyBusiness GrowthChild DevelopmentPediatricsBusinessChild NutritionGrowth TheoryDemography
The new UK growth charts for children aged 0-4 years (designed using data from the new WHO standards) describe the optimal pattern of growth for all children, rather than the prevailing pattern in the UK (as with previous charts) The new charts are suitable for all ethnic groups and set breast feeding as the norm UK children match the new charts well for length and height, but after age 6 months fewer children will be below the 2nd centile for weight or show weight faltering, and more will be above the 98th centile The new charts look different: they have a separate preterm section, no lines between 0 and 2 weeks, and the 50th percentile is no longer emphasised The charts give clear instructions on gestational correction, and there is a new chart for infants born before 32 weeks' gestation The instructions advise on when and how to measure and when a measurement or growth pattern is outside the normal range The charts include a "look-up" tool for determining the body mass index centile from height and weight centiles without calculation and aid for predicting adult height The charts and supporting educational materials can be downloaded from www.growthcharts.rcpch.ac.uk adopted the WHO standard as it establishes the breastfed child as the norm, is suitable for all ethnic groups, and defines optimal growth. 4 The new charts amalgamate WHO data from age 2 weeks, with recalculated British 1990 (UK90) birth data.These data were used in preference to those of the WHO standard as the WHO dataset has no preterm birth data and the WHO term birth weights were appreciably lower. 4
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