Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Program, Office of the Director, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20852, United States.
Am J Epidemiol. 2024 Sep 3;193(9):1219-1223. doi: 10.1093/aje/kwae073.
The Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcome (ECHO) program at the National Institutes of Health is an innovative, large, collaborative research initiative whose mission is to enhance the health of children for generations to come. The goal of the ECHO program is to examine effects of a broad array of early environmental exposures on child health and development. The information includes longitudinal data and biospecimens from more than 100 000 children and family members from diverse settings across the United States ECHO investigators have published collaborative analyses showing associations of environmental exposures-primarily in the developmentally sensitive pre-, peri-, and postnatal periods-with preterm birth and childhood asthma, obesity, neurodevelopment, and positive health. Investigators have addressed health disparities, joint effects of environmental and social determinants, and effects of mixtures of chemicals. The ECHO cohort is now entering its second 7-year cycle (2023-2030), which will add the preconception period to its current focus on prenatal through adolescence. Through a controlled access public-use database, ECHO makes its deidentified data available to the general scientific community. ECHO cohort data provide opportunities to fill major knowledge gaps in environmental epidemiology and to inform policies, practices, and programs to enhance child health. This article is part of a Special Collection on Environmental Epidemiology.
美国国立卫生研究院的儿童健康结果的环境影响(ECHO)计划是一项创新的、大型的合作研究计划,其使命是提高未来几代儿童的健康水平。ECHO 计划的目标是研究广泛的早期环境暴露对儿童健康和发育的影响。该信息包括来自美国各地不同环境的 100,000 多名儿童及其家庭成员的纵向数据和生物样本。ECHO 研究人员已经发表了合作分析结果,表明环境暴露——主要是在发育敏感的产前、围产期和产后期间——与早产和儿童哮喘、肥胖、神经发育和健康有关。研究人员已经解决了健康差距、环境和社会决定因素的联合影响以及化学混合物的影响。ECHO 队列现在进入了第二个 7 年周期(2023-2030 年),这将把受孕前阶段纳入其目前对产前到青春期的关注。通过一个受控访问的公共使用数据库,ECHO 将其匿名数据提供给广大科学界。ECHO 队列数据为填补环境流行病学中的主要知识空白以及为加强儿童健康的政策、实践和计划提供了机会。本文是环境流行病学特刊的一部分。