Research on the height of primary school students in Zhuzhou and analysis of influencing factors of short stature
Xiao-min Ye, Qiong Tang, Yi-can Yang, Xiang-Lan Wen

TL;DR
This study examines the height of primary school children in Zhuzhou, identifies factors linked to short stature, and suggests strategies to improve growth.
Contribution
A new growth curve for children in Zhuzhou and identification of specific factors contributing to short stature in the region.
Findings
The prevalence of short stature among 6–12-year-olds in Zhuzhou is 3.97%, with boys more affected than girls.
Suburban children have a higher short stature rate (5.80%) compared to urban children (3.67%).
Factors like low birth weight, insufficient activity, and parental education are linked to short stature.
Abstract
To construct a growth curve for children aged 6–12 years residing in Zhuzhou, assess the height distribution among local elementary school students, and analyze the factors contributing to short stature. We measured the heights of children from 110 elementary schools in Zhuzhou using cluster sampling. A total of 106,864 samples of children aged 6–12 years were collected and divided into 25 age groups, each spanning three months. The Lambda-Mu-Sigma (LMS) method was employed to calculate the 3rd, 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, 90th, and 97th percentiles of height for each age group. Children below the 3rd percentile according to the national growth curve made in 2005 were considered to be short stature. The heights of boys and girls in Zhuzhou were compared with the national average heights from 2005. The height growth curve was constructed using the curve estimation function of SPSS software…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBirth, Development, and Health · Growth Hormone and Insulin-like Growth Factors · Human Health and Disease
