| Literature DB >> 22806452 |
Megan Ann Carter1, Lise Dubois, Mark S Tremblay, Monica Taljaard.
Abstract
The objective of this paper was to determine the influence of place factors on weight gain in a contemporary cohort of children while also adjusting for early life and individual/family social factors. Participants from the Québec Longitudinal Study of Child Development comprised the sample for analysis (n = 1,580). A mixed-effects regression analysis was conducted to determine the longitudinal relationship between these place factors and standardized BMI, from age 4 to 10 years. The average relationship with time was found to be quadratic (rate of weight gain increased over time). Neighborhood material deprivation was found to be positively related to weight gain. Social deprivation, social disorder, and living in a medium density area were inversely related, while no association was found for social cohesion. Early life factors and genetic proxies appeared to be important in explaining weight gain in this sample. This study suggests that residential environments may play a role in childhood weight change; however, pathways are likely to be complex and interacting and perhaps not as important as early life factors and genetic proxies. Further work is required to clarify these relationships.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 22806452 PMCID: PMC3675723 DOI: 10.1007/s11524-012-9712-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Urban Health ISSN: 1099-3460 Impact factor: 3.671
FIGURE 1.Sampling of children in the Québec Longitudinal Study of Child Development.
Description of considered explanatory variables in the QLSCD
| Variable | Description | Change over time |
|---|---|---|
| Socio-economic/demographic | ||
| Sex | Male yes/no | Invariant |
| Socioeconomic status (SES)a | Calculated based on gross household income, and mother’s and father’s education level, and job prestige; categorized into tertiles—low, middle, and high | Dependent |
| Mother is an immigrant | Yes/no | Invariant |
| Single parent family | Yes/no | Dependent |
| Early life exposures | ||
| Rapid weight gain in infancy | Highest two quintiles of average monthly weight gain from 0 to 5 months | Invariant |
| Mother smoked during pregnancy | Yes/no | Invariant |
| Breastfeeding status | Exclusively breastfed to 3 months of age or older; never breastfed; other | Invariant |
| Birth weightb | Low < 2.5 kg; normal ≥ 2.5 kg but ≤4 kg; high > 4 kg | Invariant |
| Genetic proxiesc | ||
| Mother is obese | Mother’s BMI ≥ 30 based on self-reported height and weight | Invariant |
| Overeating phenotyped | “Often” eats too much and/or “sometimes” or “often” eats too fast | Invariant |
| Place | ||
| Materially deprived | Highest two quintiles of the material deprivation factorial score | Invariant |
| Socially deprived | Highest two quintiles of the social deprivation factorial score | Invariant |
| High social cohesion | Scale score in the bottom 50 % | Dependent |
| High social disorder | Less than a perfect scale score (<3) | Dependent |
| Population density: | Dependent | |
| High | Census metropolitan areas with ≥100,000 inhabitants | |
| Medium | Census agglomerations with 10,000 to <100,000 inhabitants | |
| Low | Rural or small towns with <10,000 inhabitants | |
Time dependency reflects the fact that these variables were measured at all study time points (4, 6, 7, 8, and 10 years of age) where all available data points were entered into the mixed models analysis. Values for social cohesion and disorder were not collected at 7 years for all children so the value at 6 years was used. For SES and population density, values were not collected at 4 years for all children so the value at 3.5 years (fourth data collection cycle) was used. All time invariant variables were measured at the first data collection cycle of the original cohort study (5 months) except for the genetic proxies
aFor more information on how this variable was calculated and interpreted, please see Ref. 25
bBased on medical records at birth
cRecognizing that these factors could also capture elements of the home environment, as well as lifestyle behaviors. Obesity status of the mother might also be considered an early life factor as this was measured when the child was 1.5 years (at the second data collection cycle)
dConsidered for inclusion based on research showing that at least half of the genetic influence on obesity operates through appetite (see Refs. 26,27; measured at 4 years
Baseline descriptive data (4 years) of included children (n = 1,580)*
| Variable | Percentage ( |
|---|---|
| Socio-economic/demographic | |
| Male | 50.0 (790) |
| Socioeconomic status (SES) | |
| Low | 31.9 (499) |
| Middle | 33.9 (530) |
| High | 34.2 (535) |
| Mother is an immigrant | 8.5 (135) |
| Single parent family | 13.2 (208) |
| Early life exposures | |
| Rapid weight gain in infancy | 38.7 (611) |
| Mother smoked during pregnancy | 24.9 (394) |
| Breastfeeding status | |
| ≥3 months exclusively | 25.8 (408) |
| Never | 27.2 (429) |
| Other | 47.0 (743) |
| Birth weight | |
| Low | 3.6 (57) |
| Normal | 85.7 (1354) |
| High | 10.7 (169) |
| Genetic proxies | |
| Mother is obese | 9.9 (157) |
| Child overeats | 22.5 (355) |
| Place | |
| Materially deprived | 37.9 (599) |
| Socially deprived | 37.1 (586) |
| High social cohesion | 47.8 (732) |
| High social disorder | 26.5 (416) |
| Population density | |
| High | 66.4 (1035) |
| Medium | 11.2 (174) |
| Low | 22.5 (350) |
*Due to missing data on time-dependent variables, denominators for these variables are slightly less than 1,580
Directly measured mean BMI and BMI Z-score by mean age for included children (n = 1,580)
| Age (years) (SD) | BMI (SD) | BMI Z-score (SD) | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4.2 (0.26) | 15.7 (1.60) | 0.014 (1.23) | 1,352 |
| 6.1 (0.25) | 15.7 (1.90) | 0.031 (1.15) | 1,008 |
| 7.1 (0.25) | 16.1 (2.27) | 0.043 (1.10) | 1,296 |
| 8.1 (0.26) | 16.8 (2.59) | 0.170 (1.10) | 1,161 |
| 10.1 (0.26) | 18.4 (3.24) | 0.342 (0.99) | 1,123 |
SD standard deviation
Unadjusted and adjusted BMI Z-score trend models: significant fixed effect parameters and their 95 % confidence limits (n = 1,580)
| Fixed effects | Parameter estimate | 95 % Confidence limits |
|---|---|---|
| Unadjusted model | ||
| Intercept | 0.062* | 0.011, 0.114 |
| Age | 0.049*** | 0.039, 0.060 |
| Age2 | 0.012*** | 0.008, 0.016 |
| Adjusted model | ||
| Intercept | −0.136 * | −0.268, −0.006 |
| Main effects | ||
| Age | 0.031 * | 0.006, 0.055 |
| Age2 | 0.013*** | 0.007, 0.020 |
| Male | −0.116* | −0.213, −0.021 |
| Low SESa | −0.123** | −0.217, −0.033 |
| Middle SESa | −0.087* | −0.163, −0.014 |
| Rapid weight gain in infancy | 0.333*** | 0.223, 0.444 |
| Mother smoked during pregnancy | 0.135* | 0.021, 0.249 |
| High birth weightb | 0.390*** | 0.236, 0.549 |
| Low birth weightb | −0.456** | −0.716,−0.197 |
| Mother is obese | 0.686*** | 0.528, 0.845 |
| Child overeats | 0.422*** | 0.308, 0.537 |
| Materially deprived | 0.013 | −0.097, 0.124 |
| Socially deprived | 0.088 | −0.011, 0.188 |
| High social disorder | 0.043 | −0.025, 0.110 |
| Low population densityc | 0.011 | −0.094, 0.116 |
| Medium population densityc | 0.005 | −0.123, 0.135 |
| Linear age effects | ||
| Male | 0.047*** | 0.026, 0.068 |
| Low SESa | 0.050** | 0.022, 0.078 |
| Middle SESa | 0.020 | −0.005, 0.046 |
| Rapid weight gain in infancy | −0.009 | −0.032, 0.014 |
| Child overeats | −0.026* | −0.052, −0.000 |
| High birth weightb | −0.043* | −0.076, −0.009 |
| Low birth weightb | −0.001 | −0.062, 0.059 |
| Materially deprived | −0.004 | −0.028, 0.020 |
| Socially deprived | −0.029* | −0.051, −0.007 |
| High social disorder | 0.020 | −0.004, 0.044 |
| Low population densityc | 0.002 | −0.026, 0.030 |
| Medium population densityc | −0.050** | −0.083, −0.016 |
| Quadratic age effects | ||
| Rapid weight gain in infancy | −0.009* | −0.018, −0.001 |
| Materially deprived | 0.011** | 0.003, 0.020 |
| High social disorder | −0.012* | −0.022, −0.002 |
Model also adjusted for main effects of breastfeeding status, single parent family status, mother’s immigrant status, and high social cohesion (all were not significant)
*P ≤ 0.05; **P ≤ 0.01; *** P ≤ 0.0001
aReference is high SES
bReference is normal birth weight
cReference is high population density (census metropolitan area)
FIGURE 2.Predicted BMI Z-score smoothed individual trends by significant place factors in the QLCSD, adjusted for other model covariates.
FIGURE 3.Predicted BMI Z-score smoothed individual trends by significant social and early life factors, adjusted for other model covariates.
Neighborhood social scale items
| Scale | Response categories |
|---|---|
| Social cohesion | |
| Please tell me whether you strongly agree, agree, disagree, or strongly disagree about the following statement… | |
| 1. If there is a problem around here, the neighbors get together to deal with it | Strongly agree = 1 |
| 2. There are adults in the neighborhood that children can look up to | Agree = 2 |
| 3. People around here are willing to help their neighbors | Disagree = 3 |
| 4. You can count on adults in this neighborhood to watch out that children are safe and do not get in trouble | Strongly disagree = 4 |
| 5. When I am away from home, I know that my neighbors will keep their eyes open for possible trouble | |
| Social disorder | |
| How much of a problem is the following in this neighbourhood… | |
| 1. Litter, broken glass or garbage? | A big problem = 1 |
| 2. Selling or using drugs? | Somewhat of a problem = 2 |
| 3. Alcoholics and excessive drinking in public? | No problem = 3 |
| 4. Groups of young people who cause trouble? | |