Nutrition Assessment
Nutrition Assessment
Nutrition Assessment
NUTRITIONAL STATUS
INTRODUCTION
The nutritional status of an individual
is often the result of many
inter-related
factors.
Anthropometric methods
Biochemical, laboratory methods
Clinical methods
Dietary evaluation methods
Indirect Methods of
NutritionalAssessment
Detection of relevantsigns
helps in establishing the nutritional
diagnosis
CLINICAL ASSESSMENT/3
ADVANTAGES
Fast & Easy to perform
Inexpensive
Non-invasive
LIMITATIONS
Did not detect early
cases
Clinical signs ofnutritional
deficiency
HAIR
Spare & Protein, zinc, biotin
thin deficiency
Mid-arm circumference
Skin fold thickness
Head circumference
Head/chest ratio
Hip/waist ratio
Anthropometry for children
Accurate measurement of height and
weight is essential. The results can
then be used to evaluate the physical
growth of the child.
Height:
The subject stands erect &
bare footed on a stadiometer
with a movable head piece.
The head piece is leveled with
skull vault & height is
recorded tothe
nearest 0.5 cm.
WEIGHT MEASUREMENT
Use a regularly calibrated
electronic or balanced-beam scale.
Problems with reference
standards, i.e. local versus
international
standards.
Arbitrary statistical cut-off levels for
whatconsidered as abnormal
values.
DIETARY ASSESSMENT
Nutritional intake of humans is
assessed by five different
methods. These are:
24 hours dietary recall
Food frequency questionnaire
Dietary history sinceearly life
Food dairy technique
Observed food consumption
Hours DietaryRecall 24
Limitations:
long Questionnaire
changingdietaryhabits.
DIETARY HISTORY
It is an accurate method for
assessing the nutritional status.
The information should be collected
by a trainedinterviewer.
Detailsabout usual intake, types,
amount, frequency & timing needs
to be obtained.
Cross-checking to verify data is
important.
FOOD DAIRY
Food intake (types & amounts)
shouldbe recorded by the
consumption.
daily intake.
Evaluationby this method is expensive &
time consuming, unless
computing facilities are available.
InitialLaboratory Assessment
Hemoglobin estimation is the most
importanttest, & useful index of the
overall state of nutrition. Beside
anemiait also tells about protein &
trace element nutrition.
Stool examination for the
presence of ova and/or intestinal
parasites
Urinedipstick & microscopyfor
albumin, sugar and blood
Specific Lab Tests
Measurement of individual
nutrient in body fluids (e.g.serum
retinol, serum iron, urinary
iodine, vitamin D)
Detection of abnormal amount
of metabolites in the urine (e. g.
urinary creatinine/hydroxyproline
ratio)
Analysisof hair,nails & skin for
micro-nutrients.
Advantages ofBiochemical Method
It is useful in detecting early changes in
body metabolism & nutrition before the
appearance of overt clinical signs.
It is precise, accurate and
reproducible.
Useful to validate data obtained from
dietary methods e.g. comparing salt
intake with 24-hour urinary excretion.
Limitations ofBiochemical Method
Time consuming
Expensive
They cannotbe applied on
large scale