Impact of adversity on early childhood growth & development in rural India: Findings from the early life stress sub-study of the SPRING cluster randomised controlled trial (SPRING-ELS).

<h4>Introduction</h4>Early childhood development is key to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals and can be negatively influenced by many different adversities including violence in the home, neglect, abuse and parental ill-health. We set out to quantify the extent to which multipl...

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Main Authors: Sunil Bhopal, Reetabrata Roy, Deepali Verma, Divya Kumar, Bilal Avan, Bushra Khan, Lu Gram, Kamalkant Sharma, Seeba Amenga-Etego, Satya Narayan Panchal, Seyi Soremekun, Gauri Divan, Betty R Kirkwood
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209122
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spelling doaj-35ffd9731f834be58b8a5b8f267e923c2021-03-04T10:38:19ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01141e020912210.1371/journal.pone.0209122Impact of adversity on early childhood growth & development in rural India: Findings from the early life stress sub-study of the SPRING cluster randomised controlled trial (SPRING-ELS).Sunil BhopalReetabrata RoyDeepali VermaDivya KumarBilal AvanBushra KhanLu GramKamalkant SharmaSeeba Amenga-EtegoSatya Narayan PanchalSeyi SoremekunGauri DivanBetty R Kirkwood<h4>Introduction</h4>Early childhood development is key to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals and can be negatively influenced by many different adversities including violence in the home, neglect, abuse and parental ill-health. We set out to quantify the extent to which multiple adversities are associated with impaired early childhood growth & development.<h4>Methods</h4>This was a substudy of the SPRING cluster randomised controlled trial covering the whole population of 120 villages of rural India. We assessed all children born from 18 June 2015 for adversities in the first year of life and summed these to make a total cumulative adversity score, and four subscale scores. We assessed the association of each of these with weight-for-age z-score, length-for-age z-score, and the motor, cognitive and language developmental scales of the Bayley Scales of Infant Development III assessed at 18 months.<h4>Results</h4>We enrolled 1726 children soon after birth and assessed 1273 of these at both 12 and 18 months of age. There were consistent and strongly negative relationships between all measures of childhood adversity and all five child growth & development outcome measures at 18 months of age. For the Bayley motor scale, each additional adversity was associated with a 1.1 point decrease (95%CI -1.3, -0.9); for the cognitive scales this was 0.8 points (95%CI -1.0, -0.6); and for language this was 1.4 points (95%CI -1.9, -1.1). Similarly for growth, each additional adversity was associated with a -0.09 change in weight-for-age z-score (-0.11, -0.06) and -0.12 change in height-for-age z-score (-0.14, -0.09).<h4>Discussion</h4>Our results are the first from a large population-based study in a low/middle-income country to show that each increase in adversity in multiple domains increases risk to child growth and development at a very early age. There is an urgent need to act to improve these outcomes for young children in LMICs and these findings suggest that Early Childhood programmes should prioritise early childhood adversity because of its impact on developmental inequities from the very start.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209122
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sunil Bhopal
Reetabrata Roy
Deepali Verma
Divya Kumar
Bilal Avan
Bushra Khan
Lu Gram
Kamalkant Sharma
Seeba Amenga-Etego
Satya Narayan Panchal
Seyi Soremekun
Gauri Divan
Betty R Kirkwood
spellingShingle Sunil Bhopal
Reetabrata Roy
Deepali Verma
Divya Kumar
Bilal Avan
Bushra Khan
Lu Gram
Kamalkant Sharma
Seeba Amenga-Etego
Satya Narayan Panchal
Seyi Soremekun
Gauri Divan
Betty R Kirkwood
Impact of adversity on early childhood growth & development in rural India: Findings from the early life stress sub-study of the SPRING cluster randomised controlled trial (SPRING-ELS).
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sunil Bhopal
Reetabrata Roy
Deepali Verma
Divya Kumar
Bilal Avan
Bushra Khan
Lu Gram
Kamalkant Sharma
Seeba Amenga-Etego
Satya Narayan Panchal
Seyi Soremekun
Gauri Divan
Betty R Kirkwood
author_sort Sunil Bhopal
title Impact of adversity on early childhood growth & development in rural India: Findings from the early life stress sub-study of the SPRING cluster randomised controlled trial (SPRING-ELS).
title_short Impact of adversity on early childhood growth & development in rural India: Findings from the early life stress sub-study of the SPRING cluster randomised controlled trial (SPRING-ELS).
title_full Impact of adversity on early childhood growth & development in rural India: Findings from the early life stress sub-study of the SPRING cluster randomised controlled trial (SPRING-ELS).
title_fullStr Impact of adversity on early childhood growth & development in rural India: Findings from the early life stress sub-study of the SPRING cluster randomised controlled trial (SPRING-ELS).
title_full_unstemmed Impact of adversity on early childhood growth & development in rural India: Findings from the early life stress sub-study of the SPRING cluster randomised controlled trial (SPRING-ELS).
title_sort impact of adversity on early childhood growth & development in rural india: findings from the early life stress sub-study of the spring cluster randomised controlled trial (spring-els).
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description <h4>Introduction</h4>Early childhood development is key to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals and can be negatively influenced by many different adversities including violence in the home, neglect, abuse and parental ill-health. We set out to quantify the extent to which multiple adversities are associated with impaired early childhood growth & development.<h4>Methods</h4>This was a substudy of the SPRING cluster randomised controlled trial covering the whole population of 120 villages of rural India. We assessed all children born from 18 June 2015 for adversities in the first year of life and summed these to make a total cumulative adversity score, and four subscale scores. We assessed the association of each of these with weight-for-age z-score, length-for-age z-score, and the motor, cognitive and language developmental scales of the Bayley Scales of Infant Development III assessed at 18 months.<h4>Results</h4>We enrolled 1726 children soon after birth and assessed 1273 of these at both 12 and 18 months of age. There were consistent and strongly negative relationships between all measures of childhood adversity and all five child growth & development outcome measures at 18 months of age. For the Bayley motor scale, each additional adversity was associated with a 1.1 point decrease (95%CI -1.3, -0.9); for the cognitive scales this was 0.8 points (95%CI -1.0, -0.6); and for language this was 1.4 points (95%CI -1.9, -1.1). Similarly for growth, each additional adversity was associated with a -0.09 change in weight-for-age z-score (-0.11, -0.06) and -0.12 change in height-for-age z-score (-0.14, -0.09).<h4>Discussion</h4>Our results are the first from a large population-based study in a low/middle-income country to show that each increase in adversity in multiple domains increases risk to child growth and development at a very early age. There is an urgent need to act to improve these outcomes for young children in LMICs and these findings suggest that Early Childhood programmes should prioritise early childhood adversity because of its impact on developmental inequities from the very start.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209122
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