# Assessment of the reliability of at-home caregiver-collected anthropometric measurements

**Authors:** Jenny J. Ly, Ana Sosa, Matthew Heidman, Matthew F. Dixon, Christian Ostolaza, Susan M. Dallabrida

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fped.2024.1441321 · Frontiers in Pediatrics · 2024-09-04

## TL;DR

This study shows that caregivers can reliably collect infant growth measurements at home with telehealth guidance, matching the accuracy of healthcare professionals.

## Contribution

Demonstrates the feasibility of caregiver-collected anthropometric data via telehealth as a reliable alternative to healthcare professionals.

## Key findings

- Caregiver measurements had technical errors within acceptable limits for all parameters.
- No bias was found in caregiver or healthcare professional measurements compared to the gold standard.
- Reliability coefficients for all measurements were above 0.96, indicating strong consistency.

## Abstract

Anthropometric measurements provide valuable information about infant growth patterns and can help identify nutrition, growth, and developmental concerns. With the increasing use of telehealth and decentralized clinical trial approaches, there is potential for caregivers to collect anthropometric measurements at home via teleconference with healthcare providers (HCPs) to monitor infant growth, which indirectly reflects health status. This study aimed to evaluate whether telehealth-guided caregivers can utilize standardized methods and home-use measurement equipment to collect reliable anthropometric measurements compared to HCPs and study nurses.

The study compared the weight, length, and head circumference measurements collected by caregivers (n = 8 pairs), pediatric HCPs (n = 7), and study nurses (n = 4), who served as the gold standard comparator group. Four silicone dolls with varied anthropometrics were used as surrogates for human infants.

Caregiver inter- and intra-observer technical errors of measurement (TEMs) were all equal to or below the maximum allowed error (MAE). For HCPs, only intra-observer TEM for length and inter-observer TEM for HC and length were within the MAE. There was no evidence of bias for either caregiver or HCP measurements compared to the gold standard. Coefficients of reliability (R) were greater than 0.96 for all measurements.

Preliminary results from this study demonstrate that telehealth-guided caregivers can capture accurate and reliable anthropometric measurements compared to HCPs. The results suggest that remote measurement collection allows for more frequent monitoring while reducing the burden on patients and caregivers in primary care and clinical trials such as infant formula growth monitoring studies.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

30 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11408210/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11408210