Parent‐reported compared with researcher‐measured child height and weight: impact on body mass index classification in Australian pre‐school aged children

Author:

Jackson Jacklyn Kay123ORCID,Grady Alice123ORCID,Lecathelinais Christophe123ORCID,Fielding Alison14ORCID,Yoong Sze Lin1235ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Priority Research Centre for Health Behaviour College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing, University of Newcastle Callaghan NSW Australia

2. Hunter Medical Research Institute (HMRI) New Lambton Heights NSW Australia

3. Hunter New England Population Health Unit, Hunter New England Local Health District Wallsend NSW Australia

4. NSW & ACT Research and Evaluation Unit, GP Synergy, Regional Training Organisation (RTO) Mayfield West NSW Australia

5. Global Centre for Preventive Health and Nutrition, Institute for Health Transformation, School of Health and Social Development, Deakin University Geelong Victoria Australia

Abstract

AbstractIssue AddressedParent‐reported data may provide a practical and cheap way for estimating young children's weight status. This study aims to compare the validity and reliability of parent‐reported height and weight to researcher‐measured data for pre‐school aged children (aged 2‐6 years).MethodsThis was a nested study within a cluster randomised controlled trial (October 2016‐April 2017), conducted within 32 Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) services across New South Wales, Australia. Parents of children reported on demographics and child height and weight via a survey. For the same child, height and weight data were objectively collected by trained research staff at the service. We calculated mean differences, intra‐class correlations, Bland‐Altman plots, percentage agreement and Cohen's kappa coefficient (>0.8 = “excellent”; 0.61‐0.8 = “good”; 0.41‐0.60 = “moderate”; 0.21 and 0.4 = “fair [weak]”; <0.2 = “poor”).ResultsOverall, 89 children were included (mean age: 4.7 years; 59.5% female). The mean difference between parent‐reported and researcher‐measured data were small (BMI z‐score: mean difference −0.01 [95% CI: −0.45 to 0.44]). There was “fair/weak” agreement between parent‐categorised child BMI compared with researcher‐measured data (Cohen's Kappa 0.24 [95% CI: 0.06 to 0.42]). Agreement was poor (Cohen's kappa <0.2) for female children, when reported by fathers or by parents with a BMI > 25 kg/m2.ConclusionThere was “fair/weak” agreement between parent‐reported and measured estimates of child weight status.So What?Parent's report of weight and height may be a weak indicator of adiposity at the level of individuals however it may be useful for aggregate estimates.

Funder

Cancer Council NSW

National Health and Medical Research Council

National Heart Foundation of Australia

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Community and Home Care

Reference22 articles.

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4. Reflections on the NSW Healthy Children Initiative: a comprehensive state‐delivered childhood obesity prevention initiative;Rissel C;Public Health Res Pract,2019

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