Literature DB >> 16570090

Overweight and obesity prevalence in children based on 6- or 12-month IOTF cut-points: does interval size matter?

P J Kremer1, A C Bell, A M Sanigorski, B A Swinburn.   

Abstract

The International Obesity Taskforce (IOTF) recommends using age- and gender-specific body mass index (BMI) cut-points for defining the prevalence of overweight and obesity in children. These are given in both 6- and 12-month age intervals. Since the BMI-for-age curves are nonlinear, a degree of bias will be introduced when age intervals are wide. We aimed to quantify this bias in prevalence estimates in 2178 Australian children aged 4-12 years using 12- versus 6-month age intervals. Using the 12-month interval, the prevalence of overweight and obesity was underestimated by 1.4% compared to the 6-month interval estimates; however, this was age-dependent. It overestimated prevalence for 4-year olds, but underestimated it for older ages by up to 2.6%. Overweight prevalence was generally affected more than obesity prevalence. The use of different age intervals for IOTF cut-points introduces a small but systematic bias in prevalence estimates of overweight and obesity.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16570090     DOI: 10.1038/sj.ijo.0803162

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Obes (Lond)        ISSN: 0307-0565            Impact factor:   5.095


  1 in total

1.  Use of body mass index and percentage overweight cutoffs to screen Japanese children and adolescents for obesity-related risk factors.

Authors:  Masayuki Okuda; Shinichi Sugiyama; Ichiro Kunitsugu; Yuji Hinoda; Yumi Okuda; Komei Shirabe; Norikazu Yoshitake; Tatsuya Hobara
Journal:  J Epidemiol       Date:  2009-10-24       Impact factor: 3.211

  1 in total

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