What Is a Growth Chart? (And Why It Matters)
A growth chart is a standardized tool for tracking how a child's height, weight, BMI, or head circumference compares with children of the same age and sex. Pediatricians use it because growth is a pattern, not a single number. A dot on one visit gives context; a series of dots shows whether the child is following a steady channel over time.
In the United States, most school-age height, weight, and BMI-for-age interpretation uses CDC 2000 growth charts. WHO standards are commonly used for younger children and international references. Both systems are reference tools. They help clinicians notice unusual patterns, but they do not diagnose a condition by themselves.
The most important mindset shift is simple: a growth chart is not a ranking system. It is not a contest where higher is automatically better. It is a map that helps you ask better questions about trend, proportion, timing, family pattern, and overall health.
Quick Fact