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Two phases of childhood obesity Evidence1 #390259 Research reported in the International Journal of Obesity, which compares the obesity data in the 1980s with 307 present-day children, suggests that there may be two distinct phases of childhood obesity; one operating selectively according to parental BMI during early childhood, the second more generally in puberty and influenced more by peer-group factors. The finding suggests that different approaches may be needed to tackle the different phases of the problem. | |
+Citaten (2) - CitatenVoeg citaat toeList by: CiterankMapLink[2] Childhood obesity: evidence for distinct early and late environmental determinants A 12-year longitudinal cohort study (EarlyBird 62)
Citerend uit: M Mostazir, A Jeffery, L Voss, T Wilkin Publication info: 2015 April, 27 Geciteerd door: David Price 7:13 AM 1 May 2015 GMT Citerank: (1) 399997Two phases of childhood obesityResearch reported in the International Journal of Obesity, which compares the obesity data in the 1980s with 307 present-day children, suggests that there may be two distinct phases of childhood obesity; one operating selectively according to parental BMI during early childhood, the second more generally in puberty and influenced more by peer-group factors. The finding suggests that different approaches may be needed to tackle the different phases of the problem.648CC79C URL:
| Fragment- Background/objective: The prevalence of childhood obesity continues to rise in most countries, but the exposures responsible remain unclear. The shape of the BMI distribution curve defines how a population responds, and can be described by its three parameters - skew (L), median (M) and variance (S). We used LMS analysis to explore differences in the BMI trajectories of contemporary UK children with those of 25 years ago, and to draw inferences on the exposures responsible.
Subjects/methods: We applied Cole’s LMS method to compare the BMI trajectories of 307 UK children (EarlyBird cohort) measured annually from 5-16y (2000-2012) with those of the BMI data set used to construct the UK 1990 growth centiles, and used group-based trajectory modelling (GBTM) to establish whether categorical trajectories emerged.
Results: Gender-specific birth weights were normally distributed and similar between both data sets. The skew and variance established by 5y in the 1990 children remained stable during the remainder of their childhood, but the pattern was different for children 25 years on. The skew at 5y among the EarlyBird children was greatly exaggerated, and involved selectively the offspring of obese parents, but returned to 1990 levels by puberty. As the skew diminished, so the variance in BMI rose sharply. The median BMI of the EarlyBird children differed little from that of 1990 before puberty, but diverged from it as the variance rose. GBTM uncovered four groups with distinct trajectories, which were related to parental obesity.
Conclusions: There appear to be two distinct environmental interactions with body mass among contemporary children, the one operating selectively according to parental BMI during early childhood, the second more generally in puberty |
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