Correction to “Unintentional error in formula preparation and its simulated impact on infant weight and adiposity”

IF 2.7 3区 医学 Q1 PEDIATRICS
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Altazan AD, Gilmore LA, Guo J, et al. Unintentional error in formula preparation and its simulated impact on infant weight and adiposity. Pediatr Obes. 2019; 14:e12564. https://doi.org/10.1111/ijpo.12564

There was a mistake in the results section of the summary:

‘Results: Nineteen percent of bottles (20 of 636) prepared contained the recommended amount of infant formula powder.’

Should read as: ‘Nineteen percent of the bottles (121 of 636)…’.

The revised Results summary is shown below:

Nineteen percent of the bottles (121 of 636) prepared contained the recommended amount of infant formula powder. Three percent were underdispensed, and 78% of bottles were overdispensed, resulting in 11% additional infant formula powder. Mathematical modelling feeding 11% above energy requirements exclusively for 6 months for male and female infants suggested that infants at the 50th percentile for weight at birth would reach the 75th percentile with increased adiposity by 6 months.

We apologize for this error.

更正“配方奶粉配制中的意外错误及其对婴儿体重和肥胖的模拟影响”
Altazan AD,Gilmore LA,Guo J,等。配方奶粉配制中的意外错误及其对婴儿体重和肥胖的模拟影响。小儿肥胖。2019年;14:e12564。https://doi.org/10.1111/ijpo.12564There摘要的结果部分出现了一个错误:“结果:19%的瓶子(636瓶中的20瓶)含有推荐量的婴儿配方奶粉。”应读作:“19%的瓶子(636个中的121个)…”。修订后的结果摘要如下所示:19%的水瓶(636中的121个瓶)含有推荐量的婴儿配方奶粉。3%的瓶子分配不足,78%的瓶子分配过多,导致婴儿配方奶粉增加了11%。数学模型仅为6提供高于能量要求11%的饲料 男性和女性婴儿的月数表明,出生时体重第50百分位的婴儿将达到第75百分位,肥胖增加6 月。我们对此错误深表歉意。
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来源期刊
Pediatric Obesity
Pediatric Obesity PEDIATRICS-
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
5.30%
发文量
117
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Pediatric Obesity is a peer-reviewed, monthly journal devoted to research into obesity during childhood and adolescence. The topic is currently at the centre of intense interest in the scientific community, and is of increasing concern to health policy-makers and the public at large. Pediatric Obesity has established itself as the leading journal for high quality papers in this field, including, but not limited to, the following: Genetic, molecular, biochemical and physiological aspects of obesity – basic, applied and clinical studies relating to mechanisms of the development of obesity throughout the life course and the consequent effects of obesity on health outcomes Metabolic consequences of child and adolescent obesity Epidemiological and population-based studies of child and adolescent overweight and obesity Measurement and diagnostic issues in assessing child and adolescent adiposity, physical activity and nutrition Clinical management of children and adolescents with obesity including studies of treatment and prevention Co-morbidities linked to child and adolescent obesity – mechanisms, assessment, and treatment Life-cycle factors eg familial, intrauterine and developmental aspects of child and adolescent obesity Nutrition security and the "double burden" of obesity and malnutrition Health promotion strategies around the issues of obesity, nutrition and physical activity in children and adolescents Community and public health measures to prevent overweight and obesity in children and adolescents.
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