WORLD JOURNAL OF ADVANCE
HEALTHCARE RESEARCH

( An ISO 9001:2015 Certified International Journal )

An International Peer Review Journal for Medical Science and Pharma Professionals

An Official Publication of Society for Advance Healthcare Research (Reg. No. : 01/01/01/31674/16)

World Journal of Advance Healthcare Research (WJAHR) has indexed with various reputed international bodies like : Google Scholar , Index Copernicus , SOCOLAR, China , Research Bible, Fuchu, Tokyo. JAPAN , Cosmos Impact Factor , Scientific Indexing Services (SIS) , UDLedge Science Citation Index , International Impact Factor Services , International Society for Research Activity (ISRA) Journal Impact Factor (JIF) , Scientific Journal Impact Factor (SJIF) , IFSIJ Measure of Journal Quality , International Scientific Indexing, UAE (ISI) (Under Process) , International Impact Factor Services (IIFS) , Web of Science Group (Under Process) , Directory of Research Journals Indexing , Scholar Article Journal Index (SAJI) , International Scientific Indexing ( ISI ) , Academia , Scope Database , Research Publication Rating and Indexing , Doi-Digital Online Identifier , ISSN National Centre , Zenodo Indexing , International CODEN Service, USA , 

ISSN 2457-0400

Impact Factor  :  6.711

WJAHR Citation

  All Since 2020
 Citation  105  60
 h-index  4  4
 i10-index  3  2

News & Updation

  • Article Invited for Publication

    Dear Researcher, Article Invited for Publication  in WJAHR coming Issue.

  • Journal web site support Internet Explorer, Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Opera, Saffari for easy download of article without any trouble.

    .

  • 6th International Conference on Human and Soci

    Venue:FCT Education Resource Center, Abuja- Nigeria                                        September 22-24, 2019

  • .

    6th INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY AND CURRICULUM STUDIES(ICETC2019) 

     

    Venue: FCT Education Resource Center, Abuja-Nigeria

    September 22-24, 2019

  • WJAHR: New Impact Factor

    WJAHR Impact Factor has been Increased to 6.711 for Year 2024.

  • WJAHR: OCTOBER ISSUE PUBLISHED

    OCTOBER 2025 Issue has been successfully launched on OCTOBER 2025.

  • New Issue Published

    Its Our pleasure to inform you that, WJAHR October 2025 Issue has been Published, Kindly check it on https://www.wjahr.com/home/current_issues

Best Article Awards

World Journal of Advance Healthcare Research (WJAHR) is giving Best Article Award in every Issue for Best Article and Issue Certificate of Appreciation to the Authors to promote research activity of scholar.

Best Article of current issue

Download Article : Click here

Indexing

Abstract

ESTIMATION OF PEDIATRIC HEIGHT FROM TIBIAL LENGTH IN MEDICAL CITY HOSPITALS

*Asseel Kareem Tawfeeq, Besma Mohamed Ali, Samer Hussein Jasim

ABSTRACT

Background: Accurate estimation of stature in children is essential in clinical, emergency, and forensic settings where direct measurement may be impractical. This study aimed to evaluate the relationship between tibial length and pediatric height in Iraqi children and to establish regression equations for reliable stature estimation. Method: A cross-sectional study was conducted at the Medical City Complex in Baghdad from January to June 2025, including 300 children aged 1–15 years without musculoskeletal deformities or growth disorders. Standardized measurements of tibial length and height were obtained. Results: showed that 62.3% of participants were older than 5 years, with nearly equal gender distribution (50.7% females, 49.3% males). Children older than 5 years demonstrated significantly greater mean tibial length (29.48 ± 4.39 cm) and height (126.16 ± 13.54 cm) compared with younger children (21.04 ± 2.79 cm and 95.87 ± 8.27 cm, respectively; p = 0.0001). Regression equations derived from tibial length showed strong predictive accuracy for height estimation. Correlation was particularly strong among younger children (≤5 years; p = 0.0001) and females (p = 0.0001), while associations in males and older children were weaker. Conclusion: The study confirms tibial length as a robust predictor of pediatric stature in the Iraqi population, with stronger associations in early childhood. Establishing locally validated regression models enhances clinical decision-making in growth assessment, drug dosing, and emergency care, while also providing forensic value for stature reconstruction. Future multicenter research is recommended to refine predictive equations and broaden their applicability.

[Full Text Article] [Download Certificate]