| Literature DB >> 20630082 |
Sarah E Anderson1, Xin He, Sarah Schoppe-Sullivan, Aviva Must.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Some evidence suggests that obesity and behavior problems are related in children, but studies have been conflicting and have rarely included children under age 4. An association between behavior problems in early childhood and risk for obesity could suggest that a common set of factors contribute to both. Our research objectives were to determine the extent to which externalizing behavior in early childhood is related to body mass index (BMI) in early childhood and through age 12, and to evaluate whether these associations differ by sex and race.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20630082 PMCID: PMC2912880 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2431-10-49
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Characteristics of participants included in analytic sample
| 24 months | 36 months | 54 months | 1st grade | 3rd grade | 5th grade | 6th grade | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| na | 990 | 1055 | 1004 | 967 | 903 | 890 | 881 |
| Mean age, years (SD) | 2.1 (0.1) | 3.1 (0.1) | 4.7 (0.1) | 7.0 (0.3) | 9.0 (0.3) | 11.0 (0.3) | 11.9 (0.3) |
| Male, % | 49.5% | 50.5% | 49.8% | 49.8% | 49.2% | 50.3% | 49.1% |
| White, % | 82.0% | 82.0% | 82.8% | 82.0% | 81.9% | 81.2% | 81.5% |
| Mean height, cm (SD) | 86.8 (3.2) | 95.3 (3.5) | 106.9 (4.3) | 122.5 (5.4) | 135.1 (6.3) | 147.1 (7.3) | 153.0 (7.6) |
| Mean weight, kg (SD) | 12.7 (1.5) | 14.7 (1.8) | 18.4 (2.6) | 25.4 (5.2) | 34.0 (9.0) | 44.0 (13.1) | 49.2 (14.3) |
| Mean BMI (SD) | 16.8 (1.4) | 16.2 (1.4) | 16.1 (1.6) | 16.8 (2.6) | 18.4 (3.8) | 20.1 (4.8) | 20.8 (4.9) |
| Obesityb, % | 5.6% | 5.9% | 9.4% | 11.9% | 16.8% | 19.2% | 18.3% |
SD = standard deviation, BMI = body mass index
a Restricted to children not missing information on behavior problems at 24 months nor BMI at wave tabulated.
b Obesity defined as BMI-for-age above the sex-specific 95th percentile of the CDC BMI-for-age growth charts.
Prevalence and association of high externalizing behavior and obesity at 24 months relative to covariates
| n (%) | High externalizing behaviora: | Obesityb: | Odds ratio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | 1189 (100%)d | 74/1189 (6.2%) | 55/990 (5.6%) | 2.9 (1.3, 6.5) |
| Boys | 612 (51.5%) | 43/612 (7.0%) | 33/490 (6.7%) | 2.7 (1.0, 7.6) |
| Girls | 577 (48.5%) | 31/577 (5.4%) | 22/500 (4.4%) | 2.7 (0.7, 10.2) |
| White | 973 (81.8%) | 50/973 (5.1%)* | 39/812 (4.8%)* | 1.7 (0.5, 5.8) |
| Black and Other | 216 (18.2%) | 24/216 (11.1%) | 16/178 (9.0%) | 3.6 (1.0, 12.4) |
| ≥College degree | 448 (37.7%) | 11/448 (2.5%)* | 12/378 (3.2%)* | - f |
| Some college | 402 (33.8%) | 21/402 (5.2%) | 20/341 (5.9%) | 1.1 (0.1, 8.7) |
| ≤High school graduate | 339 (28.5%) | 42/339 (12.4%) | 23/271 (8.5%) | 3.5 (1.3, 9.4) |
| ≥poverty threshold | 994 (84.8%) | 44/994 (4.4%)* | 38/835 (4.6%)* | 3.3 (1.2, 8.9) |
| < poverty threshold | 178 (15.2%) | 26/178 (14.6%) | 17/143 (11.9%) | 1.6 (0.4, 6.2) |
| No | 926 (83.2%) | 38/926 (4.1%)* | 41/776 (5.3%) | 2.8 (0.9, 8.5) |
| Yes | 187 (16.8%) | 28/187 (15.0%) | 10/152 (6.6%) | 2.6 (0.6, 11.0) |
*χ2 or Fisher's exact test, P < 0.05; Fisher's exact test when expected cell frequency < 5.
a High externalizing behavior defined as Child Behavior Checklist T score ≥ 65 at 24 months.
b Obesity defined as BMI-for-age at or above the 95th percentile of the sex-specific CDC BMI-for-age growth charts.
c Odds ratio (95% Confidence Interval) from logistic regression models, predicting odds of obesity at 24 months with high externalizing behavior (≥ 65) at 24 months relative to lower levels of externalizing behavior (< 65).
d Restricted to children who are not missing information on behavior problems at 24 months and who had 1 or more BMI measurements between 24 months and 6th grade (n = 1189); 199 of these children were missing BMI at 24 months.
e Maternal education at child's birth.
f Unable to estimate within this strata due to data sparseness.
g Seventeen with missing information excluded.
h Maternal depression defined as CES-D score > 16; Seventy-six with missing information excluded.
Association of externalizing behavior at 24 months with BMI from 24 months to 12 yearsa
| Association of 24 month externalizing behavior with BMI trajectory from 2 to 12 years | Including interaction between BMI, externalizing behavior and race | Adjusting for internalizing behavior | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Raceb | 0.031 (0.11) P = 0.79 | 0.079 (0.65) P = 0.90 | 0.018 (0.65) P = 0.98 |
| Exc | 0.021 (0.009) P = 0.02 | 0.015 (0.010) P = 0.14 | 0.026 (0.011) P = 0.02 |
| Ex * age | 0.002 (0.002) P = 0.38 | 0.00002 (0.002) P = 0.99 | 0.00002 (0.002) P = 0.99 |
| Ex * race | 0.011 (0.012) P = 0.37 | 0.013 (0.012) P = 0.31 | |
| Ex *age*race | 0.003 (0.0007) P < 0.001 | 0.003 (0.0007) P < 0.001 | |
| Intd | -0.016 (0.006) P = 0.02 |
a Coefficient (standard error) and P value from linear mixed effects models with random intercept and slope (age centered at mean of 6.7 years). All models are predicting BMI and include an intercept, linear, quadratic, and cubic effects of age, and adjustment for household poverty and maternal depression at 24 months. Sex, maternal education, and birth weight were evaluated as potential confounding variables and dropped from these final models. Externalizing and internalizing behaviors were modeled as continuous CBCL T-scores; model coefficients presented predict BMI changes associated with a 1 unit increase in 24 month CBCL T-score.
b Race coded as 0=white, 1=black or other.
c CBCL mother-reported externalizing behavior T score at 24 months.
d CBCL mother-reported internalizing behavior T score at 24 months
Figure 1Predicted BMI trajectories for low, medium, and high levels of externalizing behavior at 24 months. Predicted BMI trajectories, by race, from final model in table 3 at three levels of externalizing behavior at 24 months: High (CBCL externalizing behavior T-score = 65, solid line), medium (CBCL externalizing behavior T-score = 50, heavy dashed line), and low (CBCL externalizing behavior T-score = 35, dotted line).