• Eur J Clin Nutr · Oct 2002

    Comparative Study

    A comparison of international references for the assessment of child and adolescent overweight and obesity in different populations.

    • Y Wang and J Q Wang.
    • Department of Human Nutrition, University of Illinois, Chicago 60612, USA. youfwang@uic.edu
    • Eur J Clin Nutr. 2002 Oct 1; 56 (10): 973-82.

    ObjectiveTo compare different references assessing child and adolescent overweight and obesity in different populations.DesignComparison cross-sectional study.SettingThe United States, Russia, China.SubjectsA total of 6108 American, 6883 Russian and 3014 Chinese children aged 6-18 y.InvestigationUsing nationwide survey data from the USA (NHANES III, 1988-1994), Russia (1992), and China (1991), we compared three references: (1) the International Obesity Task Force (IOTF) reference, sex-age-specific body mass index (BMI) cut-offs that correspond to BMIs of 25 for overweight and 30 for obesity at age 18; (2) the World Health Organization (WHO) reference--BMI 85th percentiles for overweight in adolescents (10-19 y) and weight-for-height Z-scores for obesity in children under 10; (3) a USA reference--BMI 85th and 95th percentiles to classify overweight and obesity, respectively.ResultsUsing the IOTF reference and 85th BMI percentiles, overweight prevalence was 6.4 and 6.5% in China, 15.7 and 15.0% in Russia, and 25.5 and 24.4% in the USA, respectively. Notable differences existed for several ages. Kappa (=0.84-0.98) indicated an excellent agreement between the two references in general, although they varied by sex-age groupings and countries. Overweight prevalence was twice as high in children (6-9 y) than in adolescents (10-18 y) in China and Russia, but was similar in the USA. Estimates of obesity prevalence using these three references varied substantially.ConclusionsThe references examined produce similar estimates of overall overweight prevalence but different estimates for obesity. One should be cautious when comparing results based on different references.SponsorshipUniversity of Illinois and University of North Carolina.

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