A data frame containing the age-dependent distribution of the D-score for children aged 0-5 years. The distribution is modelled after the LMS distribution (Cole & Green, 1992), and is equal for both boys and girls. The LMS values can be used to graph reference charts and to calculate age-conditonal Z-scores, also known as DAZ.
builtin_references
A data.frame
with 265 rows and 17 variables:
Name | Label |
pop |
Population, either "dutch" or "gcdg" |
age |
Decimal age in years |
mu |
M-curve, median D-score, P50 |
sigma |
S-curve, spread expressed as coefficient of variation |
nu |
L-curve, the lambda coefficient of the LMS model for skewness |
P3 |
P3 percentile |
P10 |
P10 percentile |
P25 |
P25 percentile |
P50 |
P50 percentile |
P75 |
P75 percentile |
P90 |
P90 percentile |
P97 |
P97 percentile |
SDM2 |
-2SD centile |
SDM1 |
-1SD centile |
SD0 |
0SD centile, median |
SDP1 |
+1SD centile |
SDP2 |
+2SD centile |
The "dutch"
references were calculated from the SMOCC data, and cover
age range 0-2.5 years (van Buuren, 2014).
The "gcdg"
references were calculated from the 15 cohorts of the
GCDG-study, and cover age range 0-5 years (Weber, 2019).
Cole TJ, Green PJ (1992). Smoothing reference centile curves: The LMS method and penalized likelihood. Statistics in Medicine, 11(10), 1305-1319.
Van Buuren S (2014). Growth charts of human development. Stat Methods Med Res, 23(4), 346-368. pdf
Weber AM, Rubio-Codina M, Walker SP, van Buuren S, Eekhout I, Grantham-McGregor S, Caridad Araujo M, Chang SM, Fernald LCH, Hamadani JD, Hanlon A, Karam SM, Lozoff B, Ratsifandrihamanana L, Richter L, Black MM (2019). The D-score: a metric for interpreting the early development of infants and toddlers across global settings. BMJ Global Health, BMJ Global Health 4: e001724. pdf.
# NOT RUN {
head(builtin_references)
# }
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