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Sunday 28 October 2007

Dominic Street BMI

reposted from: http://apps.nccd.cdc.gov/dnpabmi/Calculator.aspx?CalculatorType=English

Calculator for Childrens BMI

BMI—Body Mass Index

BMI Calculator for Child and Teen: Results on a Growth Chart



Information Entered for Dominic Street

Age: 16 years 11 months Sex: Boy
Birth Date: November 12, 1990 Height: 5 feet 4 inch(es)
Date of Measurement: October 28, 2007 Weight: 126 pounds




Results




Based on the height and weight entered, the BMI is 21.6, placing the BMI-for-age at the 56th percentile for boys aged 16 years 11 months. This teen has a healthy weight.



Body mass index-for-age percentiles: Boys, 2 to 20 years

Growth chart of BMI-for-age percentile for boys, 2 to 20 years



BMI Range: Healthy weight


orange underweight, less than the 5th percentile
green healthy weight, 5th percentile up to the 85thpercentile
yellow at risk of overweight, 85th to less than the 95th percentile
red overweight, equal to or greater than the 95th percentile




What does this mean?

BMI is calculated using your child’s weight and height and is then used to find the corresponding BMI-for-age percentile for your child’s age and sex.

BMI-for-age percentile shows how your child’s weight compares to that of other children of the same age and sex. For example, a BMI-for-age percentile of 65% means that the child’s weight is greater than that of 65% of other children of the same age and sex.

Based on the height and weight entered, the BMI is 21.6, placing the BMI-for-age at the 56th percentile for boys aged 16 years 11 months. This teen has a healthy weight.

Maintaining a healthy weight throughout childhood and adolescence may reduce the risk of becoming overweight or obese as an adult.




What should you do?

Regardless of the current BMI-for-age category, help your child or teen develop healthy weight habits and keep track of BMI-for-age.

Practice healthy weight habits
Encourage children and teens to practice healthy weight habits by:
  • Eating healthy foods
  • Participating in physical activity on most (preferably all) days of the week
  • Limiting television viewing

For more information, see
Tips to Promote Healthy Eating and Physical Activity for Children and Teens
(http://www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpa/obesity/childhood/tips_for_parents.htm.)


Keep track of BMI-for-age
Check BMI-for-age annually, or more often if recommended by the child’s healthcare provider. Tracking growth patterns over time can help you make sure your child is achieving or maintaining a healthy weight. A single BMI-for-age calculation is not enough to evaluate long-term weight status because height and weight change with growth.





About Growth Charts

See the following example of how some sample BMI numbers would be interpreted for a 10-year-old boy.



Example of BMI-for-age percentile growth chart


This information was printed from CDC's Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity (DNPAO) website http://apps.nccd.cdc.gov/dnpabmi/Result.aspx?&dob=11/12/1990&dom=10/28/2007&age=203&ht=64&wt=126&gender=1&method=0&inchtext=0&wttext=0

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