Trajectories of childhood weight gain: the relative importance of local environment versus individual social and early life factors.

To determine the association between local environmental factors with child weight status in a longitudinal study, using a semi-parametric, group-based method, while also considering social and early life factors.Standardized, directly measured BMI from 4-10 y of age, and group-based trajectory mode...

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Main Authors: Megan A Carter, Lise Dubois, Mark S Tremblay, Monica Taljaard, Bobby L Jones
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3471956?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-69d4d178a30a4f299c4be4260b9b9bc22020-11-25T02:39:15ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-01710e4706510.1371/journal.pone.0047065Trajectories of childhood weight gain: the relative importance of local environment versus individual social and early life factors.Megan A CarterLise DuboisMark S TremblayMonica TaljaardBobby L JonesTo determine the association between local environmental factors with child weight status in a longitudinal study, using a semi-parametric, group-based method, while also considering social and early life factors.Standardized, directly measured BMI from 4-10 y of age, and group-based trajectory modeling (PROC TRAJ) were used to estimate developmental trajectories of weight change in a Québec birth cohort (n = 1,566). Associations between the weight trajectories and living location, social cohesion, disorder, and material and social deprivation were estimated after controlling for social and early life factors.FOUR WEIGHT TRAJECTORY GROUPS WERE ESTIMATED: low-increasing (9.7%); low-medium, accelerating (36.2%); medium-high, increasing (43.0%); and high-stable (11.1%). In the low-increasing and medium-high trajectory groups, living in a semi-urban area was inversely related to weight, while living in a rural area was positively related to weight in the high-stable group. Disorder was inversely related to weight in the low-increasing group only. Other important risk factors for high-stable weight included obesity status of the mother, smoking during pregnancy, and overeating behaviors.In this study, associations between local environment factors and weight differed by trajectory group. Early life factors appear to play a more consistent role in weight status. Further work is needed to determine the influence of place on child weight.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3471956?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Megan A Carter
Lise Dubois
Mark S Tremblay
Monica Taljaard
Bobby L Jones
spellingShingle Megan A Carter
Lise Dubois
Mark S Tremblay
Monica Taljaard
Bobby L Jones
Trajectories of childhood weight gain: the relative importance of local environment versus individual social and early life factors.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Megan A Carter
Lise Dubois
Mark S Tremblay
Monica Taljaard
Bobby L Jones
author_sort Megan A Carter
title Trajectories of childhood weight gain: the relative importance of local environment versus individual social and early life factors.
title_short Trajectories of childhood weight gain: the relative importance of local environment versus individual social and early life factors.
title_full Trajectories of childhood weight gain: the relative importance of local environment versus individual social and early life factors.
title_fullStr Trajectories of childhood weight gain: the relative importance of local environment versus individual social and early life factors.
title_full_unstemmed Trajectories of childhood weight gain: the relative importance of local environment versus individual social and early life factors.
title_sort trajectories of childhood weight gain: the relative importance of local environment versus individual social and early life factors.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description To determine the association between local environmental factors with child weight status in a longitudinal study, using a semi-parametric, group-based method, while also considering social and early life factors.Standardized, directly measured BMI from 4-10 y of age, and group-based trajectory modeling (PROC TRAJ) were used to estimate developmental trajectories of weight change in a Québec birth cohort (n = 1,566). Associations between the weight trajectories and living location, social cohesion, disorder, and material and social deprivation were estimated after controlling for social and early life factors.FOUR WEIGHT TRAJECTORY GROUPS WERE ESTIMATED: low-increasing (9.7%); low-medium, accelerating (36.2%); medium-high, increasing (43.0%); and high-stable (11.1%). In the low-increasing and medium-high trajectory groups, living in a semi-urban area was inversely related to weight, while living in a rural area was positively related to weight in the high-stable group. Disorder was inversely related to weight in the low-increasing group only. Other important risk factors for high-stable weight included obesity status of the mother, smoking during pregnancy, and overeating behaviors.In this study, associations between local environment factors and weight differed by trajectory group. Early life factors appear to play a more consistent role in weight status. Further work is needed to determine the influence of place on child weight.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3471956?pdf=render
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