Emba rien yang baik... Ifat juga mau donk .... Anak saya Gege 2 tahun 4 bulan ( laki-laki ) Makasih sebelumnya. Ifat-Cilegon From: Mamik2 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> on 06/06/2000 03:56 AM Please respond to [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] cc: (bcc: Siti BKC1082 Fatmawati/BKCP/BKC) Subject: [balita-anda] FW: Pediatric Growth Charts - agak panjang > Yth Mba' Rien... > Saya mau dong dikirim(Anak saya laki2 ,usia3 tahun pada bln July 2000 > nanti) > > Salam, > Mamik J Maddenuang(mama Ghifari) > Mamik2 [[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > > > > -----Original Message----- > From: Rien [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] > Sent: 05 Juni 2000 16:25 > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: [balita-anda] [Fwd: Pediatric Growth Charts Revised] - > agak panjang > > Rekan2, > Seingat saya dulu ada yg. menanyakan mengenai grafik berat badan / > tinggi badan anak. > Ternyata sudah (baru) ada revisinya (versi amerika). > Website-nya ada tertulis di bagian bawah artikel. > Utk. yg. tidak bisa browsing ke internet, saya sudah mendownload chart > dari websitenya utk. boys dan girls. > Yang berminat, tolong kirim mail ke e-mail saya pribadi. Jangan ke > milis > balita-anda, ya... Nanti membebani rekan2 yg. lain. Atau Pak Admin > membolehkan saya utk. kirim attachment kalau yg. lain setuju ? > > Trims, > Rien. > > -------- Original Message -------- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (AP / KAREN GULLO, Associated Press Writer) > Subject: Pediatric Growth Charts Revised > > WASHINGTON (AP) -- For the first time in 23 years, the > government > is updating the charts used to track children's growth and adding a > new formula to help identify weight problems in children as young > as 2. > The charts, a staple in the offices of pediatricians and school > > nurses around the country, now include the body mass index, or BMI, > a single number that compares weight to height. It's already used > to track obesity among adults. > The new charts from the Centers for Disease Control and > Prevention also should more accurately reflect the average height > and weight of U.S. children from birth to age 3, because they are > based on more recent and much more comprehensive data than the old > charts for babies and toddlers. The changes are minor except for > the lightest and heaviest children, CDC officials said. > ``One of the first questions people ask new parents is 'How much > > did your baby weigh?''' said Secretary of Health and Human Services > Donna Shalala. ``From that moment on, growth charts are a reference > point for health professionals and parents as their children grow > into adolescents and adulthood.'' > The new research found babies and toddlers to be slightly > heavier than in the previous charts, and also found infants in the > first few months have larger head circumferences than the older > charts showed. > For example, in a previous chart, a 3-year-old girl at the 50th > > percentile -- or the chart's halfway point -- would be 32.6 pounds > and 38.4 inches in length. On the new chart, the 50th percentile is > 33.3 pounds and 38.7 inches. > As a result, pediatricians will classify more babies as > underweight and fewer as overweight, said officials at CDC's > National Center for Health Statistics, which published the charts. > On the new charts, a 22.5-pound 2-year-old girl would be in the > > 5th percentile, which is considered underweight by many doctors > depending on how long the child measured. On the old chart, the > same child would have been in the 10th percentile, lean but not > necessarily underweight. > The new BMI charts, which begin at age 2, are a more accurate > tool for measuring obesity than older charts that included a > measurement of weight according to height, officials said. > ``This means parents have an opportunity to change their > children's eating habits before a weight problem ever develops,'' > said Shalala. > A 2-year-old boy in the 50th percentile, or middle range, would > > have a BMI of 16.5. A boy with a score of 19.8 would be in the 95th > percentile -- meaning the vast majority of boys his age have a lower > BMI. Kids at the 95th percentile are considered overweight and > those at the 85th percentile are considered at risk. > Obesity is a growing national health problem among both adults > and children. Nearly one in five American adults are obese and the > number of obese children has doubled in the past 20 years to about > 4.5 million kids, or 11 percent of youngsters ages 6 to 17, > according to the latest government studies. > Health professionals believe that catching the problem is > important in preventing children from going on to have weight > problems or becoming obese later in life. > The new charts use government data from the last three decades > about formula- and breast-fed children from all racial and ethnic > groups. The old charts were based on a private study during the > 1960s and 1970s that looked only at white, formula-fed children in > Ohio. > *------ > On the Net: > The new growth charts can be found at > http://www.cdc.gov/growthcharts > > >> Pusing milih POP3 atau web mail? mail.telkom.net solusinya << > >> Belanja Info & Keperluan Balita? Klik, http://www.balitanet.or.id > >> Info balita, http://www.balita-anda.indoglobal.com > Etika berinternet, email ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Stop berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > > > > > > > > > >> Pusing milih POP3 atau web mail? mail.telkom.net solusinya << >> Belanja Info & Keperluan Balita? Klik, http://www.balitanet.or.id >> Info balita, http://www.balita-anda.indoglobal.com Etika berinternet, email ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Stop berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> Pusing milih POP3 atau web mail? mail.telkom.net solusinya << >> Belanja Info & Keperluan Balita? Klik, http://www.balitanet.or.id >> Info balita, http://www.balita-anda.indoglobal.com Etika berinternet, email ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Stop berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED]