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October 2001, Volume 25, Number 10, Pages 1532-1536
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Paper
Early body mass index and other anthropometric relationships between parents and children
D L Safer1, W S Agras1, S Bryson1 and L D Hammer2

1Stanford University School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Behavioral Medicine Program, Stanford, California, USA

2Stanford University School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Stanford, California, USA

Correspondence to: D L Safer, Stanford University School of Medicine Department of Psychiatry, 401 Quarry Road, Stanford, CA 94305-5722, USA. E-mail: dlsafer@stanford.edu

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess longitudinally the relationship between measures of adiposity in children over the first 8 y of life with that of their parents and to explore the role of parental adiposity in the development of childhood adiposity.

DESIGN: Longitudinal study of measures of adiposity in children.

SUBJECTS: A community sample from three health service systems including 114 children followed annually from infancy to age 8 and their 228 biological parents.

METHODS: Measurements were assessed at baseline for parents (6 months post-partum for mothers) and at regular intervals for children beginning at age 2 months. Measurements included weight, height, triceps skinfold, subscapular skinfold, midarm circumference, waist and hip.

RESULTS: The major findings were: (1) significant correlations between parental body mass index (BMI), both maternal and paternal, and their biological offspring first emerged at age 7; (2) children with two overweight parents had consistently elevated BMI compared to children with either no overweight parents or one overweight parent. These differences became significant beginning at age 7.

CONCLUSIONS: This study supports the hypothesis that familial factors (biological and/or environmental) affecting the development of adiposity emerge at specific ages and are related to the adiposity of both parents.

International Journal of Obesity (2001) 25, 1532-1536

Keywords

body mass index; children; parent; parent-child relationship; overweight

Received 27 October 2000; revised 27 February 2001; accepted 27 March 2001
October 2001, Volume 25, Number 10, Pages 1532-1536
Table of contents    Previous  Abstract  Next   Full text  PDF
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