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To investigate if the association between maternal pre-pregnancy BMI and offspring’s body composition in late adolescence and young adulthood varies by offspring birth order and sex.
Design
Family cohort study, with data from registers, questionnaires and physical examinations. The main outcome under study was offspring body composition (percentage fat mass (%FM), percentage lean mass (%LM)) measured by dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry.
Setting
Uppsala, Sweden.
Subjects
Two hundred and twenty-six siblings (first-born v. second-born; average age 19 and 21 years) and their mothers.
Results
In multivariable linear regression models, maternal pre-pregnancy BMI was positively associated with daughter’s %FM, with stronger estimates for first-born (β=0·97, 95 % CI 0·14, 1·80) v. second-born daughters (β=0·64, 95 % CI 0·08, 1·20). Mother’s BMI before her first pregnancy was associated with her second-born daughter’s body composition (β=1·05, 95 % CI 0·31, 1·79 (%FM)) Similar results albeit in the opposite direction were observed for %LM. No significant associations were found between pre-pregnancy BMI and %FM (β=0·59, 95 % CI−0·27, 1·44 first-born; β=−0·13, 95 % CI−0·77, 0·52 second-born) or %LM (β=−0·54, 95 % CI−1·37, 0·28 first-born; β=0·11, 95 % CI−0·52, 0·74 second-born) for sons.
Conclusions
A higher pre-pregnancy BMI was associated with higher offspring %FM and lower offspring %LM in late adolescence and young adulthood, with stronger associations for first-born daughters. Preventing obesity at the start of women’s reproductive life might reduce the risk of obesity in her offspring, particularly for daughters.
To study social patterning of overeating and symptoms of disordered eating in a general population.
Design
A representative, population-based cohort study.
Setting
The Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health (ALSWH), Survey 1 in 1996 and Survey 2 in 2000.
Subjects
Women (n 12 599) aged 18–23 years completed a questionnaire survey at baseline, of whom 6866 could be studied prospectively.
Results
Seventeen per cent of women reported episodes of overeating, 16 % reported binge eating and 10 % reported compensatory behaviours. Almost 4 % of women reported symptoms consistent with bulimia nervosa. Low education, not living with family, perceived financial difficulty (OR=1·8 and 1·3 for women with severe and some financial difficulty, respectively, compared with none) and European language other than English spoken at home (OR=1·5 for European compared with Australian/English) were associated with higher prevalence of binge eating. Furthermore, longitudinal analyses indicated increased risk of persistent binge eating among women with a history of being overweight in childhood, those residing in metropolitan Australia, women with higher BMI, smokers and binge drinkers.
Conclusions
Overeating, binge eating and symptoms of bulimia nervosa are common among young Australian women and cluster with binge drinking. Perceived financial stress appears to increase the risk of binge eating and bulimia nervosa. It is unclear whether women of European origin and those with a history of childhood overweight carry higher risk of binge eating because of genetic or cultural reasons.
Breast-feeding is associated with positive maternal and infant health and development outcomes. To assist identifying women less likely to meet infant nutritional guidelines, we investigated the role of socio-economic position and parity on initiation of and sustaining breast-feeding for at least 6 months.
Design
Prospective cohort study.
Setting
Australia.
Subjects
Parous women from the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health (born 1973–78), with self-reported reproductive and breast-feeding history (N 4777).
Results
While 89 % of women (83 % of infants) had ever breast-fed, only 60 % of infants were breast-fed for at least 6 months. Multiparous women were more likely to breast-feed their first child (~90 % v. ~71 % of primiparous women), and women who breast-fed their first child were more likely to breast-feed subsequent children. Women with a low education (adjusted OR (95 % CI): 2·09 (1·67, 2·62)) or a very low-educated parent (1·47 (1·16, 1·88)) had increased odds of not initiating breast-feeding with their first or subsequent children. While fewer women initiated breast-feeding with their youngest child, this was most pronounced among high-educated women. While ~60 % of women breast-fed their first, second and third child for at least 6 months, low-educated women (first child, adjusted OR (95 % CI): 2·19 (1·79, 2·68)) and women with a very low (1·82 (1·49, 2·22)) or low-educated parent (1·69 (1·33, 2·14)) had increased odds of not breast-feeding for at least 6 months.
Conclusions
A greater understanding of barriers to initiating and sustaining breast-feeding, some of which are socio-economic-specific, may assist in reducing inequalities in infant breast-feeding.
Migration has been implicated as a risk factor for autism, but evidence
is limited and inconsistent.
Aims
To investigate the relationship between parental migration status and
risk of autism spectrum disorder, taking into consideration the
importance of region of origin, timing of migration and possible
discrepancies in associations between autism subtypes.
Method
Record-linkage study within the total child population of Stockholm
County between 2001 and 2007. Individuals with high- and low-functioning
autism were defined as having autism spectrum disorder with and without
comorbid intellectual disability, and ascertained via health and
habilitation service registers.
Results
In total, 4952 individuals with autism spectrum disorder were identified,
comprising 2855 children with high-functioning autism and 2097 children
with low-functioning autism. Children of migrant parents were at
increased risk of low-functioning autism (odds ratio (OR) = 1.5, 95% CI
1.3–1.7); this risk was highest when parents migrated from regions with a
low human development index, and peaked when migration occurred around
pregnancy (OR = 2.3, 95% CI 1.7–3.0). A decreased risk of
high-functioning autism was observed in children of migrant parents,
regardless of area of origin or timing of migration. Parental age, income
or obstetric complications did not fully explain any of these
associations.
Conclusions
Environmental factors associated with migration may contribute to the
development of autism presenting with comorbid intellectual disability,
especially when acting in utero. High- and
low-functioning autism may have partly different aetiologies, and should
be studied separately.
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