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  4.2  Description Of Measuring Technique

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The subject should wear minimal clothing and no shoes. Pockets should be

emptied. For seated measurements (numbers 2 and 4-10 above), knees and

ankles should form right angles, by the use of plywood boards, 1/2 inch

thick, beneath the feet.

Measurement for occupational health are always taken on the right side

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1. Stature

The vertical distance from the floor to the vertex (i.e. the crown of the

head).

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2. Sitting height

The vertical distance from the sitting surface to the vertex.

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3. Weight

Nude body weight is measured by a physician scale.

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4. Buttock-knee length

The subject sits erect, knees together, hands in lap, popliteal fossae (hollows at the back of the knee) at the front edge of the table or sitting surface. The measurement is made between the cross-bars of the anthropometer, from the most posterior protrusion of the sacral area to the foremost edge of the patella (kneecap).

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5. Knee height above ground

The subject sits erect, heels and knees together. The anthropometer is held vertically and the measurement is made from the top of the footboard to the top of the knee just behind the patella, with the horizontal bar of the anthropometer in light contact with the leg.

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6. Breath across elbows ("biepi-condylar")

The subject sits erect, knees together, forearms at right angles to upper arms, tightly as possible to the sides. The measurement is made with an anthropometer, across the humeral epicondyles (lateral projections of the elbows) with firm pressure.

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7. Breadth across hips ("bitrochantergic")

The subject sits erect, knees together, hands on knees. The measurement is made with an anthropometer, across the greatest lateral protrusion on each side of the buttocks, using light but sure contact to compress the clothing but not the body.

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8. Buttock-popliteal length

The subject sits erect, hands on knees, popliteal fossae at the edge of the sitting surface. The measurement is made with an anthropometer, from the inner edge of a backboard (held in light contact with the subject's back, at right angles to the sitting surface) to the front end of the sitting surface.

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9. Popliteal height above ground

The subject sits relaxed. The measurement is made with the anthropometer from the top of the footboard to the top of the sitting surface.

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10. Thigh clearance

The subject sits erect, knees and heels together, right hand on left shoulder. The measurement is made with an anthropometer, from the top of the sitting surface to the junction of abdomen and thigh, with the cross-bar in firm contact to compress clothing. If no clothing is worn, light contact is made with the skin.

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11. Shoulder-elbow length

The subject may stand or sit. His upper arm hangs vertical at his side, making a right angle with the forearm. The fixed cross-bar of the anthropometer is placed on the acromion process (the uppermost bony point on the lateral aspect of the shoulder), and the movable cross-bar is raised until it makes firm contact with the olecranon process (bottom of elbow). The main anthropometer bar is held vertical.

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12. Elbow-middle finger length

The subject may stand or sit, holding his upper arm and forearm as for (11) above. With the main anthropometer bar parallel to the forearm, the fixed cross-bar touches the olecranon process (behind the elbow) and the movable arm makes light contact with the tip of the middle finger, held stiffly.

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13. Hand length

The subject holds his right hand straight, fingers open stiffly. With the shaft of the small sliding calliper parallel to the long axis of the subject's hand, the fixed cross-bar is hooked behind the proximal border (away from the fingertips towards the wrist) of the navicular bone at the base of the thumb. The movable bar of the calliper makes

light contact with the distal end of the middle fingertip.

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14. Hand breadth

The hand is held straight, fingers stiffly extended (as in (13) above). With the shaft of the sliding calliper held perpendicular to the long axis of the hand, the fixed cross-bar is hooked behind the radial surface (towards the thumb) of the joint between the metacarpal and proximal phalanx of the second finger. The movable cross-bar makes firm contact with the ulnar (away from the thumb) surface of the corresponding knuckle of the fifth finger.

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15. Hand grip diameter

The subject is given his choice of cylinders graduated in 5 mm stages. His grip diameter is that of the cylinder that feels most comfortable to his grasp.

2/3

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