The Influence of Place on Weight Gain during Early Childhood: A Population-Based, Longitudinal Study
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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.
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Keywords
Children, Neighborhood, Residential characteristics, Environment, Body weight, Body mass index, Longitudinal study, Mixed-models, Social factors
