AI Article Synopsis

  • - This study evaluates the effectiveness of handheld digital ultrasound devices in measuring children's height compared to traditional measurement boards in rural Laos, focusing on children aged 2-5 years.
  • - Trained health workers used both devices to measure the heights of 222 children, with results indicating that while ultrasound measurements were slightly higher (0.1cm bias), they were still accurate and precise according to established standards.
  • - The findings suggest that ultrasound devices can be a viable alternative to bulky measurement boards, but further research is needed to calibrate the devices to reduce bias and assess their effectiveness for younger infants.

Article Abstract

Background: Height is a key component of nutrition assessments in children from limited-resource settings. This study aimed to assess whether handheld digital ultrasound devices for measuring children's height provide comparable accuracy to traditional measurement boards, which are bulky and difficult to transport.

Methods: We trained 12 health workers to measure the standing height of 222 children aged 2-5 years in rural Lao People's Democratic Republic using both the ultrasound device and measurement board. The Bland-Altman method was used to depict limits of agreement and potential bias. We reported the technical error of measurement (TEM) for precision and accuracy, then assessed these results against the Standardized Monitoring and Assessment for Relief and Transition (SMART) Manual 2.0 and the WHO Multicentre Growth Reference Study (MGRS).

Results: The average difference between the ultrasound and board measurements was 0.096 cm (95% limits-of-agreement: 0.041cm, 0.61cm) with a systematic bias of 0.1cm (95% confidence interval: 0.067cm, 0.134cm), suggesting the ultrasound measurements were slightly higher than those from the board. The ultrasound and board TEMs for precision were 0.157cm and 0.091cm respectively. The accuracy TEM was 0.205cm. All TEMs were within SMART and WHO MGRS limits.

Conclusion: The ultrasound device is comparable to the measurement board among standing Lao children aged 2-5 years for precision and accuracy TEMs but showed a bias of 0.1cm. Further studies are required to assess whether calibration can minimise this bias and determine the ultrasound's accuracy on recumbent length for infants and younger children.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10656007PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0289514PLOS

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