Nutritional Assessment Basics - The ABCD Blueprint
- Purpose: Assess nutritional status in individuals (diagnosis, intervention) & communities (magnitude, program planning).
- Methods: Direct (individual-focused) vs. Indirect (community health indices).
- 📌 ABCD framework for direct assessment:
- Anthropometry: Body measurements (e.g., height, weight, MUAC).
- Biochemical: Laboratory tests (e.g., Hb, serum albumin).
- Clinical: Physical signs & symptoms (e.g., edema, Bitot's spots).
- Dietary: Evaluation of food intake (e.g., 24-hr recall).
⭐ Objective methods like anthropometry and biochemical tests are preferred for community nutritional diagnosis due to their quantifiable nature.
Anthropometry - Sizing Up Health
Core measurements:
- Weight: Overall body mass.
- Height/Length: Linear growth status.
- Head Circumference (HC): Brain growth indicator, crucial <3 yrs.
- Mid-Upper Arm Circumference (MUAC): Assesses muscle/fat; screens acute malnutrition.
- Children 6-59 mo: SAM < 11.5 cm; MAM 11.5-12.5 cm.
- Skinfold Thickness (SFT): Estimates subcutaneous fat.
Key Indices (WHO Z-scores):
- Weight-for-age (W/A): Underweight (< -2 SD); Severe (< -3 SD).
- Height-for-age (H/A): Stunting (< -2 SD); Severe (< -3 SD) - chronic malnutrition.
- Weight-for-height (W/H): Wasting (< -2 SD); Severe (< -3 SD) - acute malnutrition.
- BMI-for-age: Formula $kg/m^2$. Screens for thinness, overweight, obesity.
- Thinness: < -2 SD
- Overweight: > +1 SD
- Obesity: > +2 SD
⭐ Weight-for-height is the most sensitive indicator of acute malnutrition (wasting) and is independent of age in children 1-5 years.
Use WHO/IAP Growth Charts; serial measurements vital.

Biochemical & Clinical Assessment - Lab & Look
Evaluates nutritional status via lab tests (biochemical) and physical signs (clinical).
-
Biochemical Markers:
- Protein: S. Albumin (<3.5g/dL), Prealbumin, Transferrin.
- Anemia: Hb (<11g/dL preg.), S. Ferritin.
- Vitamins: S. Retinol (Vit A).
- Minerals: Urinary Iodine.
- Static (direct measure) vs. Functional (physiologic impact).
-
Clinical Signs & Syndromes:
- PEM:
- Kwashiorkor: Edema, skin/hair changes. 📌 MEALS: Malnutrition Edema, Albumin Low, Liver fatty, Skin lesions.
- Marasmus: Severe wasting, alert.

- Key Deficiencies:
- PEM:
| Nutrient | Biochemical Marker(s) | Key Clinical Sign(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Vit A | S. Retinol (↓) | Bitot's spots, Xerophthalmia, Night blindness |
| Iron | S. Ferritin (↓), Hb (↓) | Pallor, Koilonychia, Glossitis |
| Iodine | Urinary Iodine (↓) | Goiter |
| Vit D | S. 25(OH)D (↓) | Rickets (children), Osteomalacia (adults) |
| B-Complex | (Varies, e.g., B2, B3, B12) | Glossitis, Cheilosis, Angular stomatitis |
Dietary Assessment & Special Groups - Diet & Demographics
-
Dietary Assessment Methods:
- 24-hour Recall: Quick, individual, retrospective. Pro: Low burden. Con: Relies on memory.
- Food Frequency Questionnaire (FFQ): Assesses usual intake, retrospective. Pro: Captures long-term patterns. Con: Recall bias.
- Diet History: Comprehensive, individual, past dietary habits.
- Weighed Food Record: "Gold standard", prospective. Pro: High accuracy. Con: High respondent burden.
- Food Balance Sheet: Community/national level food availability.
-
Flowchart: Selecting Dietary Assessment Method
- Nutritional Assessment in Vulnerable Groups:
- Children: IAP/WHO growth charts for monitoring; IMNCI key nutritional interventions.
- Pregnant/Lactating Women: Monitor weight gain (e.g., 11-16 kg for normal BMI); anemia screening; IFA supplementation vital.
- Elderly: Mini Nutritional Assessment (MNA) tool for screening.
⭐ The Mini Nutritional Assessment (MNA) is a validated screening tool for malnutrition in the elderly, with a score < 17 indicating malnutrition.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Mid-Arm Circumference (MAC): age-independent 6 months-5 years; Shakir tape for grading.
- Body Mass Index (BMI) or Quetelet's Index is key for adult nutritional status.
- Serum albumin reflects chronic PEM; prealbumin indicates acute changes.
- Key clinical signs: Bitot's spots (Vitamin A), koilonychia (Iron), goiter (Iodine).
- WHO growth charts for children <5 years; Z-scores preferred for severity.
- Waist-hip ratio (WHR) assesses central obesity and CVD risk.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app