Off the wire
Chinese VP meets Kenyan foreign minister  • "One Belt One Road" initiative importantly contributing to Cambodia's economic development: deputy PM  • China Focus: Stock connect gaining favor among overseas investors: survey  • 1st LD-Writethru-China Focus: Top court retries rape, murder case, doubts execution  • 1st LD Writethru: Militants kill 12 people in Afghan eastern Ghazni province  • Indian stocks close flat  • Cambodia warns of dengue fever outbreak as rainy season comes  • Nepalese Vice President to leave for China on Friday  • Roundup: Singapore stocks end up 0.5 pct  • Indonesia revises downward GDP growth target to 5.1 pct this year  
You are here:   Home

Chinese children at five are 8-cm taller than four decades ago

Xinhua, June 8, 2016 Adjust font size:

Chinese children are much taller and stronger than four decades ago, with the height gap standing at 8 centimeters (cm), a government survey showed Wednesday.

The National Health and Family Planning Commission (NHFPC) surveyed 161,774 healthy children under seven years old from nine cities and their suburbs in 2015. Health authorities have conducted the survey once every 10 years since 1975.

Taking children aged 5 to 5.5 for example, the boys on average measure 113.6 cm, 8 cm taller than boys in 1975 and 1.7 cm taller than boys in 2005, while girls have an average height of 112.5 cm, 8.2 cm more than four decades ago and 1.8 cm more than ten years ago, according to the 2015 survey results.

They also weigh 3.7 to 3.28 kilograms more than children four decades ago, the survey showed.

The physical development of the children surveyed surpassed the World Health Organization's child growth standards, according to the NHFPC.

The weight and height gaps between urban children and rural children have also narrowed, according to the survey.

In 1975, urban boys aged four to five were on average 4-cm taller than their rural peers, but the gap was only 0.6 cm in 2015, while for girls of the same age the difference dropped from 4.3 cm to 0.4 cm. Endi