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    Waist circumference percentiles of black South African children aged 10 - 14 years from different study sites

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    Waist_circumference.pdf (429.9Kb)
    Date
    2019
    Author
    Motswagole, B.S.
    Ukegbu, P.O.
    Kruger, H.S.
    Smuts, C.M.
    Faber, M.
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    Abstract
    Background. Waist circumference (WC) is a useful predictor of cardiometabolic risk in children. Published data on WC percentiles of children from African countries are limited. Objectives. To describe age- and sex-specific WC percentiles in black South African (SA) children from different study sites, and compare these percentiles with median WC percentiles of African-American (AA) children. Methods. Secondary data on WC for 10 - 14-year-old black SA children (N=4 954; 2 406 boys and 2 548 girls) were extracted from the data sets of six studies. Smoothed WC percentile curves for boys and girls were constructed using the LMS method. The 50th percentile for age- and sex-specific WC measurements was compared across study sites and with AA counterparts. Results. Girls had higher WC values than boys from the 50th to 95th percentiles at all ages. The 50th WC percentiles of all groups of SA children combined were lower than those of AA children. When SA groups were considered separately, Western Cape children had median WC values similar to AA children, while rural Limpopo children had the lowest WC values. The 95th percentiles for Western Cape girls exceeded the adult cutoff point for metabolic syndrome (WC ≥80 cm) from age 11 years. Conclusions. The differences in WC values for 10 - 14-year-old children across the six study sites highlight the need for nationally representative data to develop age-, sex- and ethnic-specific WC percentiles for black SA children. The results raise concerns about high WC among Western Cape girls
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10394/32342
    http://www.sajch.org.za/index.php/SAJCH/article/view/1482/939
    http://www.sajch.org.za/index.php/SAJCH/article/view/1482
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