Other Growth Chart Resources
2000 CDC and 2006 WHO Growth Charts
Available at www.cdc.gov/growthcharts/
Use and Interpretation of the WHO and CDC Growth Charts for Children from Birth to 20 Years in the United States. [PDF- 67KB]
This guide instructs health care providers on how to use and interpret the 2006 WHO and 2000 CDC Growth Charts to assess physical growth in infants, children, and teens. Comparing body measurements with the appropriate age- and sex-specific growth chart enables health care providers to monitor growth and identify potential health- or nutrition-related problems.
Tools to Calculate BMI
BMI Percentile Calculator for Child and Teen
Provided in both English and Metric versions.Children's BMI Tool for Schools
An Excel spreadsheet intended for use by school, child care, and other professionals who want to compute Body Mass Index (BMI)-for-age for a group of up to 2000 children, for example a school class room or grade.
Clinical Growth Charts
The National Center for Health Statistics has growth charts in several formats, or use the following documents:
- CDC Table for Calculated Body Mass Index Values for Selected Heights and Weights for Ages 2 to 20 Years [PDF-168KB]
- Checkbook size BMI Table for Children and Adolescents [PDF-404KB]
Software Tools
Epi Info™7
Note: Users familiar with earlier versions of Epi Info™ may notice the absence of the NUTSTAT module. The tools available in Epi Info™ 7 have replaced it.
Epi Info™ 7, developed by the CDC, contains several nutritional anthropometry tools that can be used to look at population-based or group data. The tool, called the Nutrition Project, can be used to collect, analyze, and graph child age, weight, and height data. The Nutrition Project is a special data entry form that allows you to type in a child's age, height, weight, and other measurements for each clinic or doctor's office visit. As you enter the measurements, the appropriate percentiles are automatically calculated and added to the data set. The WHO Child Growth Standards are used to calculate percentiles for children 0 to 2 years of age, and the CDC 2000 Growth Reference is used to calculate percentiles for children 2 years of age or older.
A SAS Program for the 2000 CDC Growth Charts
The purpose of this program is to add information on various indices of anthropometric status for children aged 2 to 20 years to an already existing dataset. The indices are based on the 2000 CDC growth charts.
A SAS Program for the 2006 WHO Growth Charts
The purpose of this program is to add information on various indices of anthropometric status for children aged birth to 24 months to an already existing dataset. The indices are based on the 2006 WHO child growth standards.
- Page last reviewed: March 10, 2016
- Page last updated: March 10, 2016
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