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Statistical assessment of reliability of anthropometric measurements in the multi-site South African National Dietary Intake Survey 2022

Health and Fitness

Statistical assessment of reliability of anthropometric measurements in the multi-site South African National Dietary Intake Survey 2022

S. Nel, J. D. Man, et al.

This study by Sanja Nel, Jeroen de Man, Louise van den Berg, and Friedeburg Anna Maria Wenhold evaluates the reliability of various anthropometric measurements in a large-scale dietary survey in South Africa. Discover how training and standardized protocols improve data consistency, ultimately emphasizing the need for accuracy in nutrition research.... show more
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Anthropometric data quality in large multicentre nutrition surveys is seldom adequately assessed. In preparation for the South African National Dietary Intake Survey (NDIS-2022), this study assessed site leads' and fieldworkers' intra- and inter-rater reliability for measuring weight, length/height, mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC), waist circumference (WC) and calf circumference (CC). METHODS: Standardised training materials and measurement protocols were developed, and new anthropometric equipment was procured. Following two training rounds (12 site lead teams, 46 fieldworker teams), measurement reliability was assessed for both groups, using repeated measurements of volunteers similar to the survey target population. Reliability was statistically assessed using the technical error of measurement (TEM), relative TEM (%TEM), intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) and coefficient of reliability (R). Agreement was visualised with Bland-Altman analysis. RESULTS: By %TEM, the best reliability was achieved for weight (%TEM = 0.260–0.923) and length/height (%TEM = 0.434–0.855), and the poorest for MUAC by fieldworkers (%TEM = 2.592–3.199) and WC (%TEM = 2.353–2.945). Whole-sample ICC and R were excellent (> 0.90) for all parameters except site leads' CC inter-rater reliability (ICC = 0.896, R = 0.889), and fieldworkers' inter-rater reliability for MUAC in children under two (ICC = 0.851, R = 0.881). Bland-Altman analysis revealed no significant bias except in fieldworkers' intra-rater reliability of length/height measurement in adolescents/adults (+0.220 (0.042, 0.400) cm). Reliability was higher for site leads vs. fieldworkers, for intra-rater vs. inter-rater assessment, and for weight and length/height vs. circumference measurements. CONCLUSION: NDIS-2022 site leads and fieldworkers displayed acceptable reliability in performing anthropometric measurements, highlighting the importance of intensive training and standardised measurement protocols. Ongoing reliability assessment during data collection is recommended.
Publisher
European Journal of Clinical Nutrition
Published On
May 14, 2024
Authors
Sanja Nel, Jeroen de Man, Louise van den Berg, Friedeburg Anna Maria Wenhold
Tags
anthropometric measurements
reliability
training
nutrition research
South Africa
dietary survey
standardized protocols
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