Department of Economics, University of Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany
Center for Evaluation and Development, Mannheim, Germany.
BMJ Open. 2021 Nov 12;11(11):e046802. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-046802.
To assess how pregnancy anaemia affects the offspring's early childhood development, child haemoglobin (Hb) levels child growth and diseases incidence 2 years after birth in a low-income setting. Furthermore, we investigate the mediating role of childhood Hb levels with disease incidences and skills.
Prospective cohort study.
The study participants are 941-999 mother-child dyads from rural Madhepura in Bihar, India. In 2015, the women were recruited during pregnancy from registers in mother-child centres of 140 villages for the first wave of data collection. At the time of the second wave in 2017, the children were 22-32 months old.
The recruited women were visited at home for a household survey and the measurement of the women's and child's Hb level, child weight and height. Data on the incidence of diarrhoea and respiratory diseases or fever were collected from interviews with the mothers. To test motor, cognitive, language and socioemotional skills of the children, we used an adapted version of the child development assessment FREDI.
The average Hb during pregnancy was 10.2 g/dL and 69% of the women had pregnancy anaemia. At the age of 22-32 months, a 1 g/dL increase in Hb during pregnancy was associated with a 0.17 g/dL (95% CI: 0.11 to 0.23) increase in Hb levels of the child. Children of moderately or severely anaemic women during pregnancy showed 0.57 g/dL (95% CI: -0.78 to -0.36) lower Hb than children of non-anaemic women. We find no association between the maternal Hb during pregnancy and early skills, stunting, wasting, underweight or disease incidence. While childhood anaemia does not correlate with childhood diseases, we find an association of a 1 g/dl increase in the child's Hb with 0.04 SDs higher test scores.
While pregnancy anaemia is a risk factor for anaemia during childhood, we do not find evidence for an increased risk of infectious diseases or early childhood development delays.
在低收入环境中评估妊娠贫血如何影响后代的幼儿期发育、儿童血红蛋白(Hb)水平、儿童生长和出生后 2 年的疾病发病率。此外,我们还研究了儿童 Hb 水平与疾病发病率和技能之间的中介作用。
前瞻性队列研究。
研究参与者是来自印度比哈尔邦 Madhepura 农村地区的 941-999 对母婴对子。2015 年,妇女在妊娠期间从 140 个村庄的母婴中心的登记册中招募,进行第一波数据收集。在 2017 年的第二波中,孩子的年龄在 22-32 个月之间。
招募的妇女在家中接受家访,并测量妇女和儿童的 Hb 水平、儿童的体重和身高。从母亲的访谈中收集了腹泻和呼吸道疾病或发热的发病率数据。为了测试儿童的运动、认知、语言和社会情感技能,我们使用了儿童发展评估 FREDI 的改编版本。
妊娠期间平均 Hb 为 10.2g/dL,69%的妇女患有妊娠贫血。在 22-32 个月时,妊娠期间 Hb 增加 1g/dL,与儿童 Hb 水平增加 0.17g/dL(95%CI:0.11 至 0.23)相关。妊娠期间患有中度或重度贫血的妇女的孩子的 Hb 水平比非贫血妇女的孩子低 0.57g/dL(95%CI:-0.78 至-0.36)。我们没有发现母亲在妊娠期间的 Hb 与早期技能、发育迟缓、消瘦、体重不足或疾病发病率之间的关联。虽然儿童贫血与儿童疾病无关,但我们发现儿童 Hb 增加 1g/dL,测试得分会高出 0.04 个标准差。
虽然妊娠贫血是儿童期贫血的一个危险因素,但我们没有发现感染性疾病或幼儿期发育迟缓风险增加的证据。