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1

Anthropometric standards for the assessment of growth and nutritional status. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1990.

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2

Poverty and the anthropometric status of children: A comparative analysis of rural and urban households in Togo. Nairobi: African Economic Research Consortium, 2009.

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3

Najjar, Matthew F. Anthropometric reference data and prevalence of overweight, United States, 1976-80. Hyattsville, Md: U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, National Center for Health Statistics, 1987.

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4

D, Fryar Cheryl, Ogden Cynthia L, National Center for Health Statistics (U.S.), and National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (U.S.), eds. Anthropometric reference data for children and adults: United States, 1988-1994. Hyattsville, Md: U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics, 2009.

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5

), National Center for Health Statistics (U S. Anthropometric reference data for children and adults: United States, 2007-2010 : data from the nathional health and nutrition survey. Hyattsville, Md: U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics, 2012.

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6

Status and health in prehistory: A case study of the Moundville Chiefdom. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1988.

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7

Directorate, Canada Health Promotion. Canadian guidelines for healthy weights: Report of an expert group convened by Health Promotion Directorate, Health Services and Promotion Branch. Ottawa: Minister of National Health and Welfare, 1988.

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8

Beer, Hans De. Voeding, gezondheid en arbeid in Nederland tijdens de negentiende eeuw: Een bijdrage tot de antropometrische geschiedschrijving. Amsterdam: Aksant, 2001.

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9

Grummer-Strawn, Laurence M. Use of World Health Organization and CDC growth charts for children aged 0-59 months in the United States. Atlanta, GA: Dept. of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2010.

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10

Canada. Health and Welfare Canada., ed. Canadian guidelines for healthy weights: Report of an Expert Group convened by Health Promotion Directorate, Health Services and Promotion Branch. Ottawa: Health and Welfare Canada, 1988.

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11

Dahlgren, Eva F. Fallna kvinnor: När samhällets bottensats skulle lära sig veta hut. Stockholm: Forum, 2013.

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12

Owsley, Douglas W. Bioarchaeology on a battlefield: The abortive Confederate campaign in New Mexico. Santa Fe, N.M: Museum of New Mexico, Office of Archaeological Studies, 1994.

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13

Grave injustice: The American Indian Repatriation Movement and NAGPRA. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2002.

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14

Biocultural histories in La Florida: A bioarchaeological perspective. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2005.

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15

Ishi's brain: In search of America's last "wild" Indian. New York: Norton, 2004.

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16

H, Himes J., ed. Anthropometric assessment of nutritional status. New York: Wiley-Liss, 1991.

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17

Analytical report on child nutritional status through anthropometric measurements rural nutrition survey, 1983: Second round. Addis Ababa: The Transitional Government of Ethiopia, Central Statistical Authority, 1992.

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18

Egreteau, Pierre-Yves, and Jean-Michel Boles. Assessing nutritional status in the ICU. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199600830.003.0204.

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Decreased nutrient intake, increased body requirements, and/or altered nutrient utilization are frequently combined in critically-ill patients. The initial nutritional status and the extent of the disease-related catabolism are the main risk factors for nutrition- related complications. Many complications are related to protein energy malnutrition, which is frequent in the ICU setting. Assessing nutritional status pursues several different goals. Nutritional assessment is required for patients presenting with clinical evidence of malnutrition, with chronic diseases, with acute conditions accompanied by a high catabolic rate, and elderly patients. Recording the patient’s history, nutrient intake, and physical examination, and subjective global assessment allows classification of nutritional status. All the traditional markers of malnutrition, anthropometric measurements and plasma proteins, lose their specificity in the sick adult as each may be affected by a number of non-nutritional factors. Muscle function evaluated by hand-grip strength in cooperative patients and serum albumin provide an objective risk assessment. Several nutritional indices have been validated in specific groups of patients to identify patients at risk of nutritionally-mediated complications and, therefore, the need for nutritional support. A strong suspicion remains the best way of uncovering potentially harmful nutritional deficiencies.
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19

Barbara, Richardson, Cleaton-Jones Peter, Granath Lars, and South African Medical Research Council., eds. Dental caries, nutrient intake, dietary habits, anthropometric status, oral hygiene, and salivary factors and microbiota in South African black, Indian and white 4-5 year-old children: Descriptive data from a survey in 1984. Parow, South Africa: Medical Research Council, 1991.

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20

A, McDowell Margaret, and National Center for Health Statistics (U.S.), eds. Anthropometric reference data for children and adults, United States, 2003-2006. Hyattsville, MD: U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics, 2008.

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21

Beattie, R. Mark, Anil Dhawan, and John W.L. Puntis. Nutritional assessment and requirements. Oxford University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198569862.003.0001.

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Nutritional assessment 2Risk factors for undernutrition 3Nutritional intake 4Taking a feeding history 5Basic anthropometry: the assessment of body form 6Growth 7Patterns of growth 15Malnutrition 17Nutritional requirements 19Nutritional status reflects the balance between supply and demand and the consequences of any imbalance. Nutritional assessment is therefore the foundation of nutritional care for children. When judging the need for nutritional support an assessment must be made both of the underlying reasons for any feeding difficulties, and of current nutritional status. This process includes a detailed dietary history, physical examination, anthropometry (weight, length; head circumference in younger children) with reference to standard growth charts, and basic laboratory indices when possible. In addition, skin fold thickness and mid-upper arm circumference measurements provide a simple method for estimating body composition....
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22

Who Expert Committee On Physical Status. Physical Status: The Use and Interpretation of Anthropometry (Technical Report Series). World Health Organization, 1995.

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23

WHO Expert Committee on Physical Status: the Use and Interpretation of Anthropometry., ed. Physical status: The use and interpretation of anthropometry : report of a WHO Expert Committee. Geneva: World Health Organization, 1995.

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24

W, Owsley Douglas, Rose Jerome Carl, United States. Dept. of Defense. Legacy Resources Management Program., Construction Engineering Research Laboratory, and Arkansas Archeological Survey, eds. Bioarcheology of the north central United States. Fayetteville, Ark: Arkansas Archeological Survey, 1997.

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25

How to weigh and measure children: Assessing the nutritional status of young children in household surveys : preliminary version. New York: United Nations, Dept. of Technical Co-operation for Development and Statistical Office, 1986.

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26

Gaiha, Raghav, Raghbendra Jha, Vani S. Kulkarni, and Nidhi Kaicker. Diets, Nutrition, and Poverty. Edited by Ronald J. Herring. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195397772.013.029.

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This chapter addresses a persistent tension in current debates over food security, with illustrative data from India. The case allows us to disaggregate concepts in food policy that are often lumped together, so as to better understand what is at stake in rapidly changing economies more generally. Despite rising incomes, there has been sustained decline in per capita nutrient intake in India in recent years. The assertion by Deaton and Dreze (2009) that poverty and undernutrition are unrelated is critically examined. A demand-based model in which food prices and expenditure played significant roles proved robust, while allowing for lower calorie “requirements” due to less strenuous activity patterns, life-style changes, and improvements in the epidemiological environment. This analysis provides reasons for not delinking nutrition and poverty; it confirms the existence of poverty-nutrition traps in which undernutrition perpetuates poverty. A new measure of child undernutrition that allows for multiple anthropometric failures (e.g., wasting, underweight, and stunting) points to much higher levels of undernutrition than conventional ones. Dietary changes over time, and their nutritional implications, have welfare implications at both ends of the income and social-status pyramids. Since poverty is multidimensional, money-metric indicators such as minimum income or expenditure are not reliable, because these cannot adequately capture all the dimensions. The emergent shift of the disease burden toward predominately food-related noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) poses an additional challenge. Finally, the complexity of normative issues in food policy is explored. Current approaches to food security have veered toward a “right-to-food” approach. There are, however, considerable problems with creating appropriate mechanisms for effectuating that right; these are explored briefly. Cash transfers touted to avoid administrative costs and corruption involved in rural employment guarantee and targeted food-distribution programs are likely to be much less effective if the objective is to enable large segments of the rural population to break out of nutrition-poverty traps. The chapter ends by exploring an alternative model, based on the same normative principle: a “right to policies,” or a “right to a right.”
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27

J, Kuczmarski Robert, National Center for Health Statistics (U.S.), and National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (U.S.), eds. 2000 CDC growth charts for the United States: Methods and development. Hyattsville, Md: Dept. of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics, 2002.

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28

Puntis, John. Nutritional assessment. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198759928.003.0003.

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Routine assessment of nutritional status should be part of normal practice when seeing any patient. The purpose is to document objective nutritional parameters (e.g. anthropometry), identify nutritional deficiencies, and establish nutritional needs. Protein–energy malnutrition has many adverse consequences including growth failure (identified by reference to standard growth charts). Worldwide, malnutrition contributes to a third of deaths in children under 5 years of age, and one in nine people don’t have enough food to lead an active and healthy life. In developed countries, malnutrition complicates both acute and chronic illness with negative effects on outcomes. In clinical practice, a useful approach to nutritional assessment is to consider three elements: ‘what you are’ (i.e. body habitus—underweight for height; short for age; etc.), ‘what you can do’ (functional activity), and ‘what you eat’ (current nutritional intake).
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29

Diet, Health, And Status Among the Pasion Maya: A Reappraisal of the Collapse (Vanderbilt Institute of Mesamerican Archaeology). Vanderbilt University Press, 2006.

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30

Stark, Nancy Norris. Growth changes among Cambodian and Vietnamese refugee children and adolescents since arrival in the United States. 1985.

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31

Rose, Jerome Carl. Bioarcheology of the South Central United States (Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Series, No. 55). Arkansas Archeological Survey, 1999.

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32

WHO Expert Committee on Physical Status: the Use and Interpretation of Anthropometry. and WHO Working Group on Infant Growth., eds. An evaluation of infant growth: A summary of analyses performed in preparation for the WHO Expert Committee on Physical Status, The Use and Interpretation of Anthropometry. Geneva: Nutrition Unit, World Health Organization, 1994.

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33

Canadian guidelines for body weight classification in adults. [Ottawa]: Health Canada, 2003.

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34

Edwards, Steven C., and Elizabeth R. Adams. Biometrics Use in the Department of Defense. Nova Science Publishers, Incorporated, 2012.

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35

An evaluation of the variability among experienced testers using the U.S. Army's circumference method to estimate body composition. 1991.

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36

An evaluation of the variability among experienced testers using the U.S. Army's circumference method to estimate body composition. 1991.

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37

An evaluation of the variability among experienced testers using the U.S. Army's circumference method to estimate body composition. 1989.

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38

Biometric Technologies for Military Identification and Operations. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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39

1957-, Kerber Jordan E., ed. Cross-cultural collaboration: Native peoples and archaeology in the northeastern United States. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2006.

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40

Cross-Cultural Collaboration: Native Peoples and Archaeology in the Northeastern United States. University of Nebraska Press, 2006.

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41

(Foreword), Joe Watkins, and Jordan E. Kerber (Editor), eds. Cross-Cultural Collaboration: Native Peoples and Archaeology in the Northeastern United States. University of Nebraska Press, 2006.

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42

Ancient Burial Practices in the American Southwest: Archaeology, Physical Anthropology, and Native American Perspectives. University of New Mexico Press, 2001.

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43

Armelagos, George J., Alan H. Goodman, Debra L. Martin, and Ann L. Magennis. Black Mesa Anasazi Health: Reconstructing Life from Patterns of Death and Disease (Occasional Paper, No 14). Southern Illinois University Press, 1991.

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44

L, Martin Debra, and Black Mesa Archaeological Project, eds. Black Mesa Anasazi health: Reconstructing life from patterns of death and disease. [Carbondale]: Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, Center for Archaeological Investigations, 1991.

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45

Spencer, Larsen Clark, ed. Bioarchaeology of Spanish Florida: The impact of colonialism. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2001.

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46

Starn, Orin. Ishi's Brain: In Search of America's Last "Wild" Indian. W. W. Norton & Company, 2004.

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47

Starn, Orin. Ishi's Brain: In Search of America's Last "Wild" Indian. W. W. Norton & Company, 2005.

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48

Starn, Orin. Ishi's Brain: In Search of Americas Last Wild Indian. Norton & Company, Incorporated, W. W., 2005.

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49

Starn, Orin. Ishi's Brain: In Search of America's Last "Wild" Indian. W. W. Norton & Company, 2005.

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50

R, Mitchell Douglas, and Brunson-Hadley Judy L. 1952-, eds. Ancient burial practices in the American Southwest: Archaeology, physical anthropology, and Native American perspectives. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2001.

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