Morgen Camilla Schmidt, Andersen Per Kragh, Mortensen Laust Hvas, Howe Laura D, Rasmussen Mette, Due Pernille, Sørensen Thorkild I A, Andersen Anne-Marie Nybo
Department of Clinical Epidemiology (formerly Institute of Preventive Medicine), Copenhagen, Denmark.
Section of Social Medicine, Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
BMJ Open. 2017 Jan 20;7(1):e011781. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-011781.
Socioeconomic inequalities in birth weight and in body mass index (BMI) later in childhood are in opposite directions, which raises questions about when during childhood the change in direction happens. We examined how maternal and paternal education and household income were associated with birthweight z-scores and with BMI z-scores at age 5 and 12 months and 7 years, and we examined the socioeconomic differences in the tracking of these z-scores across infancy and childhood.
The associations were studied in a cohort of children in the Danish National Birth Cohort, single born between 1997 and 2003, for whom information on body size from at least 1 of 4 time points (n=85 062) was recorded. We examined the associations using linear mixed-effects modelling.
Children from families with a low maternal and paternal educational level changed their body size z-scores upwards between birth and age 7 years. At age 5 and 12 months, there were no educational gradient. A low maternal educational level was associated with lower birth weight for gestational age z-scores at birth for boys (-0.199; 95% CI -0.230 to -0.169) and girls (-0.198; 95% CI -0.229 to -0.167) and higher BMI z-scores at age 7 for boys (0.198; 95% CI 0.154 to 0.242) and girls (0.218; 95% CI 0.173 to 0.264). There was not a similarly clear pattern in the tracking between different household income groups. However, a low household income level was associated with higher z-scores of both birth weight and BMI at age 7 years, but with a much weaker gradient at 5 and 12 months.
The educational gradient shifts from positive with birth weight, to none during infancy to inverse with BMI at age 7 years. In contrast, the income gradient was positive at birth and at 7 years and much weaker during infancy.
出生体重和儿童期后期体重指数(BMI)的社会经济不平等呈相反方向,这引发了关于在儿童期何时发生方向变化的问题。我们研究了母亲和父亲的教育程度以及家庭收入与出生体重z评分、5个月、12个月和7岁时的BMI z评分之间的关联,并研究了这些z评分在婴儿期和儿童期追踪过程中的社会经济差异。
在丹麦国家出生队列中对一组儿童进行了关联研究,这些儿童为1997年至2003年间单胎出生,记录了来自4个时间点中至少1个时间点的身体尺寸信息(n = 85062)。我们使用线性混合效应模型研究了这些关联。
父母教育水平低的家庭中的儿童在出生至7岁之间身体尺寸z评分上升。在5个月和12个月时,不存在教育梯度。母亲教育水平低与男孩出生时按胎龄计算的出生体重较低的z评分(-0.199;95%CI -0.230至-0.169)和女孩(-0.198;95%CI -0.229至-0.167)以及男孩7岁时较高的BMI z评分(0.198;95%CI 0.154至0.242)和女孩(0.218;95%CI 0.173至0.264)相关。不同家庭收入组之间的追踪情况没有类似的明显模式。然而,家庭收入水平低与7岁时出生体重和BMI的较高z评分相关,但在5个月和12个月时梯度要弱得多。
教育梯度从与出生体重呈正相关,到婴儿期无相关,再到7岁时与BMI呈负相关。相比之下,收入梯度在出生时和7岁时为正,在婴儿期要弱得多。