Interobserver errors in anthropometry.

To present basic information on the interobserver precision and accuracy of 32 selected anthropometric measurement items, six observers measured each of 37 subjects once in two days. The data were analyzed by using ANOVA, and mean absolute bias, standard deviation of bias, and mean absolute bias in standard deviation unit were used as measures of bias. By comparing the results of the two days, the effects of the practice on measurement errors were also investigated. Variance was overestimated by more than 10% in five measurements. Interobserver error variance and random error variance were highly correlated with each other. Measures of the bias were significantly correlated with interobserver and especially with random error variances. The interobserver errors were drastically reduced on the second day in the measurement items in which the causes of the interobserver errors could be specified. It was speculated that even when the definitions of the landmarks and measurement items were clear, the ambiguity in the practical procedures in locating landmarks, applying instruments, and so on, permitted each observer to develop his or her own measurement technique, and it in turn caused interobserver errors. To minimize interobserver and random errors, the standardization of measurement technique should be extended to the details of the practical procedures.

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