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1.
J Public Health (Oxf) ; 40(3): 582-590, 2018 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29190364

ABSTRACT

Background: Parents tend to visually assess children to determine their weight status and typically underestimate child body size. A visual tool may aid parents to more accurately assess child weight status and so support strategies to reduce childhood overweight. Body image scales (BIS) are visual images of people ranging from underweight to overweight but none exist for children based on UK criteria. Our aim was to develop sex- and age-specific BIS for children, based on British growth reference (UK90) criteria. Methods: BIS were developed using 3D surface body scans of children, their associated weight status using UK90 criteria from height and weight measurements, and qualitative work with parents and health professionals. Results: Height, weight and 3D body scans were collected (211: 4-5 years; 177: 10-11 years). Overall, 12 qualitative sessions were held with 37 participants. Four BIS (4-5-year-old girls and boys, 10-11-year-old girls and boys) were developed. Conclusions: This study has created the first sex- and age-specific BIS, based on UK90 criteria. The BIS have potential for use in child overweight prevention and management strategies, and in future research. This study also provides a protocol for the development of further BIS appropriate to other age groups and ethnicities.


Subject(s)
Body Image , Pediatric Obesity/prevention & control , Age Factors , Body Height , Body Image/psychology , Body Weight , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Male , Pediatric Obesity/diagnosis , Reference Standards , Sex Factors , United Kingdom
2.
Int J Obes (Lond) ; 41(7): 1042-1047, 2017 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28293017

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Sedentary time (ST) has been reported to have a range of negative health effects in adults, however, the evidence for such effects among children and adolescents is sparse. The primary aim of the study was to examine associations between changes in sedentary behavior (time and fragmentation) and changes in adiposity across childhood and adolescence. METHODS: Participants were recruited as part of the Gateshead Millennium Study. Measures were taken at age 7 (n=502), 9 (n=506), 12 (n=420) and 15 years (n=306). Participants wore an ActiGraph GT1M and accelerometer epochs were 'sedentary' when recorded counts were ⩽25 counts per 15 s. ST was calculated and fragmentation (SF) was assessed by calculating the number of sedentary bouts per sedentary hour. Associations of changes in ST and SF with changes in adiposity (body mass index (BMI), and fat mass index (FMI)) were examined using bivariate linear spline models. RESULTS: Increasing ST by 1% per year was associated with an increase in BMI of 0.08 kg m-2 per year (95% CI: 0.06-0.10; P<0.001) and FMI of 0.15 kg m-2 per year (0.11-0.19; P<0.001). Change in SF was associated with BMI and FMI (P<0.001). An increase of 1 bout per sedentary hour per year (that is, sedentary time becoming more fragmented) was associated with an increase in BMI of 0.07 kg m-2 per year (0.06-0.09; P<0.001) and an increase in FMI of 0.14 kg m-2 per year (0.10-0.18; P<0.001) over the 8 years period. However, an increase in SF between 9-12 years was associated with a 0.09 kg m-2 per year decrease in BMI (-0.18-0.00; P=0.046) and 0.11 kg m-2 per year decrease in FMI (-0.22-0.00; P=0.049). CONCLUSIONS: Increased ST and increased SF from 7-15 years were associated with increased adiposity. This is the first study to show age-specific associations between change in objectively measured sedentary behavior and adiposity after adjustment of moderate-to-vigorous-intensity physical activity in children and adolescents. The study suggests that, targeting sedentary behavior for obesity prevention may be most effective during periods in which we see large increases in ST.


Subject(s)
Adiposity , Adolescent Behavior , Child Behavior , Exercise/physiology , Sedentary Behavior , Accelerometry/statistics & numerical data , Adolescent , Age Factors , Body Mass Index , Child , Female , Health Behavior , Humans , Linear Models , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Pediatric Obesity/prevention & control , Risk Reduction Behavior , United Kingdom , Urban Population
3.
Int J Obes (Lond) ; 41(5): 801-806, 2017 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28119532

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: There is a plethora of cross-sectional work on maternal perceptions of child weight status showing that mothers typically do not classify their overweight child as being overweight according to commonly used clinical criteria. Awareness of overweight in their child is regarded as an important prerequisite for mothers to initiate appropriate action. The gap in the literature is determining whether, if mothers do classify their overweight child's weight status correctly, this is associated with a positive outcome for the child's body mass index (BMI) at a later stage. OBJECTIVE: To explore longitudinal perceptions of child weight status from mothers of a contemporary population-based birth cohort (Gateshead Millennium Study) and relationships of these perceptions with future child weight gain. METHODS: Data collected in the same cohort at 7, 12 and 15 years of age: mothers' responses to two items concerning their child's body size; child's and mother's BMI; pubertal maturation; demographic information. RESULTS: Mothers' perceptions of whether their child was overweight did not change markedly over time. Child BMI was the only significant predictor of mothers' classification of overweight status, and it was only at the extreme end of the overweight range and in the obese range that mothers reliably described their child as overweight. Even when mothers did appropriately classify their child as overweight at an earlier stage, this was not related to relatively lower child BMI a few years later. CONCLUSIONS: Mothers tend to classify their child as overweight in only more extreme cases. It is an important finding that no beneficial impact was shown on later child BMI in overweight children whose mothers classified their child's weight status as overweight at an earlier stage.


Subject(s)
Mother-Child Relations/psychology , Mothers/psychology , Overweight/psychology , Weight Gain , Adolescent , Body Mass Index , Child , Female , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Nutrition Surveys , Overweight/epidemiology , Pediatric Obesity/epidemiology , Pediatric Obesity/prevention & control , Reproducibility of Results , Socioeconomic Factors , United Kingdom/epidemiology
4.
Prev Med Rep ; 2: 880-5, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26844164

ABSTRACT

The current study aimed to identify the determinants of objectively measured changes in sedentary time and sedentary fragmentation from age 9- to age 12 years. Data were collected as part of the Gateshead Millennium Birth Cohort study from September 2008 to August 2009 and from January 2012 to November 2012. Participants were 9.3 (± 0.4) years at baseline (n = 508) and 12.5 (± 0.3) years at follow-up (n = 427). Sedentary behaviour was measured using an ActiGraph GT1M accelerometer. Twenty potential determinants were measured, within a socio-ecological model, and tested for their association with changes in sedentary time and the extent to which sedentary behaviour is prolonged or interrupted (fragmentation index). Univariate and multivariate linear regression analyses were conducted. Measurements taken during winter and a greater decrease in moderate-to-vigorous intensity physical activity (MVPA) over time were associated with larger increases in sedentary time (seasonality ß: - 3.03; 95% CI: - 4.52, - 1.54; and change in MVPA ß: - 1.68; 95% CI: - 1.94, - 1.41). Attendance at sport clubs was associated with smaller increases in sedentary time (- 1.99; - 3.44, - 0.54). Girls showed larger decreases in fragmentation index (- 0.52; - 1.01, - 0.02). Interventions aimed at decreasing the decline in MVPA and increasing/maintaining sport club attendance may prevent the rise in sedentary time as children grow older. In addition, winter could be targeted to prevent an increase in sedentary time and reduction in sedentary fragmentation during this season.

5.
Child Care Health Dev ; 39(5): 722-7, 2013 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23039117

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Mothers' responses to questionnaire items assessing their child's weight status typically do not correspond to conventional clinical classifications based on body mass index (BMI). From this observation health professionals infer that mothers do not recognize overweight in their child. But the questions used have generally confounded factual judgements with values, so it is not clear whether the mothers are making factual errors, or differ from professionals in their values. METHODS: Cross-sectional study of population-based birth cohort at 6-8 years and their mothers (n = 540). An objective BMI matching task was used to determine the accuracy of mothers' recognition of their child's weight. Mothers matched their child to sex- and age-specific images of children of known BMI ranging from very thin to obese, and chose a descriptor of their child's weight of the kind used in previous research. RESULTS: Mothers tended to underestimate their child's BMI on the matching task. Matching errors significantly predicted mothers' description of their child's weight; those who overestimated their child's BMI on the matching task were more likely to say their child was overweight, while those who underestimated it were less likely to, independently of their child's actual BMI. CONCLUSIONS: Educational programmes aimed at parents of young primary school children need to address separately the factual and the evaluative components of their assessment of child weight.


Subject(s)
Judgment , Mothers/psychology , Parents/education , Pediatric Obesity/diagnosis , Pediatric Obesity/psychology , Body Mass Index , Child , Cohort Studies , Cross-Sectional Studies , Epidemiologic Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Overweight/diagnosis , Overweight/psychology
6.
Int J Obes (Lond) ; 35(7): 953-62, 2011 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21673651

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To investigate parents' perceptions of weight status in children and to explore parental understanding of and attitudes to childhood overweight. DESIGN: Questionnaires and focus groups within a longitudinal study. SUBJECTS: 536 parents of Gateshead Millennium Study children, of which 27 attended six focus groups. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Parents' perception of their child's weight status according to actual weight status as defined by International Obesity Taskforce (IOTF) cutoffs. Focus group outcomes included parental awareness of childhood overweight nationally and parental approaches to identifying overweight children. RESULTS: The sensitivity of parents recognising if their child was overweight was 0.31. Prevalence of child overweight was underestimated: 7.3% of children were perceived as 'overweight' or 'very overweight' by their parents, 23.7% were identified as overweight or obese using IOTF criteria. 69.3% of parents of overweight or obese children identified their child as being of 'normal' weight. During focus groups parents demonstrated an awareness of childhood overweight being a problem nationally but their understanding of how it is defined was limited. Parents used alternative approaches to objective measures when identifying overweight in children such as visual assessments and comparisons with other children. Such approaches relied heavily on extreme and exceptional cases as a reference point. The apparent lack of relevance of childhood overweight to their child's school or own community along with scepticism towards both media messages and clinical measures commonly emerged as grounds for failing to engage with the issue at a personal level. CONCLUSION: Parents' ability to identify when their child was overweight according to standard criteria was limited. Parents did not understand, use or trust clinical measures and used alternative approaches primarily reliant on extreme cases. Such approaches underpinned their reasoning for remaining detached from the issue. This study highlights the need to identify methods of improving parental recognition of and engagement with the problem of childhood overweight.


Subject(s)
Body Weight , Obesity/psychology , Parents/psychology , Weight Perception , Body Mass Index , Child , Female , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Obesity/epidemiology , Socioeconomic Factors , Surveys and Questionnaires , United Kingdom/epidemiology
7.
Int J Obes (Lond) ; 35(4): 510-6, 2011 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21224827

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To quantify how overweight children have to be for their mothers to classify them as overweight and to express concern about future overweight, and to investigate the adiposity cues in children that mothers respond to. DESIGN: Cross-sectional. SUBJECTS: A total of 531 children from the Gateshead Millennium Study cohort at 6-8 years and their mothers. MEASUREMENTS: In the mother: responses to two questions concerning the child's adiposity; height; weight; educational qualifications; and economic status. In the child: height; weight; waist circumference; skinfold thicknesses; bioelectrical impedance; and bone frame measurements. RESULTS: The body mass index (BMI) at which half the mothers classify their child as overweight was 21.3 (in the obese range for children of this age). The BMI at which half the mothers were concerned about their child becoming overweight in the future was 17.1 (below the overweight range). Waist circumference and skinfolds contributed most to mothers' responses. Although BMI and fat scores were important predictors individually, they did not contribute independently once waist circumference and skinfolds (their most visible manifestations) were included in the regression equations. Mothers were less likely to classify girls as overweight. Mothers with higher BMIs were less likely to classify their child as overweight, but were more likely to be concerned about future overweight. CONCLUSION: Health promotion efforts directed at parents of young primary school children might better capitalise on their concern about future overweight in their child than on current weight status, and focus on mothers' response to more visible characteristics than the BMI.


Subject(s)
Body Mass Index , Mothers/psychology , Overweight/psychology , Body Weight/physiology , Child , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Health Promotion , Humans , Male , Overweight/epidemiology , Overweight/prevention & control , Perception , Surveys and Questionnaires , United Kingdom/epidemiology
8.
Acta Paediatr ; 99(3): 446-51, 2010 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20003101

ABSTRACT

AIM: To determine the prevalence and associations of self-reported and parent-reported pain in children with cerebral palsy (CP) of all severities. METHOD: Cross-sectional design using a questionnaire; analysis using ordinal regression. Children aged 8-12 years were randomly selected from population-based registers of children with CP in eight European regions; a further region recruited 75 children from multiple sources. Outcome measures were pain in the previous week among children who could self-report and parents' perception of their child's pain in the previous 4 weeks. RESULTS: Data on pain were available from 490 children who could self-report and parents of 806 children (those who could and could not self-report). The estimated population prevalence of self-reported pain in the previous week was 60% (95% CI: 54-65%) and that of parent-reported pain in the previous 4 weeks was 73% (95% CI: 69-76%). In self-reporting children, older children reported more pain but pain was not significantly associated with severity of impairment. In parent reports, severity of child impairment, seizures and parental unemployment were associated with more frequent and severe pain. CONCLUSION: Pain in children with CP is common. Clinicians should enquire about pain and consider appropriate physical, therapeutic or psychological management.


Subject(s)
Cerebral Palsy/complications , Pain/epidemiology , Pain/etiology , Age Factors , Child , Cross-Sectional Studies , Europe/epidemiology , Humans , Parent-Child Relations , Prevalence , Regression Analysis , Severity of Illness Index , Surveys and Questionnaires
9.
Arch Dis Child ; 93(12): 1054-8, 2008 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18782845

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Public health surveillance of physical activity in children in the UK depends on a parent-reported physical activity questionnaire which has not been validated. We aimed to validate this questionnaire against measurement of physical activity using accelerometry in 6-7-year-old children. METHODS: In 130 children aged 6-7 years (64 boys, 66 girls) we estimated habitual moderate-vigorous intensity physical activity (MVPA) using the Health Survey for England parent-report questionnaire for physical activity. For the same time period and the same children, we measured MVPA objectively using 7-day accelerometry with the Actigraph accelerometer. RESULTS: The questionnaire over-estimated MVPA significantly (paired t test, p<0.01). Mean error (bias) when using the questionnaire was 122 min/day (95% CI 124 to 169). Mean time spent in MVPA was 146 min/day (95% CI 124 to 169) using the questionnaire and 24 min/day (95% CI 22 to 26) using the accelerometer. Rank order correlations between MVPA measured by accelerometer and estimated by the questionnaire were not statistically significant. CONCLUSIONS: Public health surveillance of physical activity should not rely on this questionnaire. Levels of habitual physical activity in children are likely to be substantially lower than those reported in UK health surveys.


Subject(s)
Motor Activity , Physical Fitness , Population Surveillance/methods , Surveys and Questionnaires , Child , Ergometry , Female , Health Surveys , Humans , Male , Time Factors , United Kingdom
10.
Disabil Rehabil ; 28(18): 1157-64, 2006 Sep 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16966237

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The aim of the paper is to explore the issues involved in measuring children's participation. METHOD: The concept of participation as encapsulated in the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) is discussed as it applies to children. The essential components of any measure of children's participation are outlined, including participation essential for normal development and survival, leisure activities, and educational participation. Some existing instruments are briefly reviewed in terms of their coverage of the essential components and the adequacy of their approach to measurement. RESULTS: Key issues regarding the content of an adequate measure of participation include the need to consider the child's dependency on the family, and their changing abilities and autonomy as they grow older. Instruments may be most appropriate where they ask the child directly, implying use of visual as well as verbal presentation. Their focus should be on 'performance' such as whether and how often an activity is taken part in, and not incorporate degree of assistance within the measurement scaling. CONCLUSIONS: Currently available measures of children's participation all have some limitations in terms of their applicability across impairment groupings, whether the child can directly respond, and in the ICF components covered. The feasibility of developing measurement instruments of children's participation at different ages is discussed.


Subject(s)
Activities of Daily Living/classification , Disability Evaluation , Disabled Children/classification , Child , Disabled Children/rehabilitation , Health Status Indicators , Humans , Social Environment , Surveys and Questionnaires
11.
Arch Dis Child ; 91(4): 312-7, 2006 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16397011

ABSTRACT

AIMS: To study the influence of maternal socioeconomic and emotional factors on infant weight gain and weight faltering (failure to thrive) in the first year of life. METHODS: The Gateshead Millennium Baby Study is a population birth cohort in northeast England studied prospectively from birth, via parental questionnaires and a health check aged 13 months. Data were collected on maternal education, deprivation, eating attitudes, and depression, using the Edinburgh Post Natal Depression Scale (EPDS) at 3 months. Weight gain was assessed using change in weight SD score, conditional on birth weight (Thrive Index); weight faltering was defined as conditional weight gain below the 5th centile. RESULTS: Of 923 eligible infants born at term, 774 (84%) had both weight and questionnaire data. Replicating a previous finding, both the highest and the lowest levels of deprivation were associated with weight faltering; this was independent of the type of milk feeding. No relation was found with maternal educational status. Maternal eating restraint was unrelated to weight gain. Infants of mothers with high depression symptom scores (EPDS >12) had significantly slower weight gain and increased rates of weight faltering up to 4 months (relative risk 2.5), especially if they came from deprived families, but by 12 months they were no different from the remainder of the cohort. CONCLUSIONS: In this setting, social and maternal characteristics had little influence on infants' weight gain, apart from a strong, but transient effect of postnatal depression.


Subject(s)
Failure to Thrive/etiology , Weight Gain , Child of Impaired Parents , Depression, Postpartum , Educational Status , Epidemiologic Methods , Feeding Behavior , Female , Humans , Infant , Poverty , Socioeconomic Factors
12.
Arch Dis Child ; 89(11): 1028-31, 2004 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15499056

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Iron deficiency is common in early childhood and has been associated with developmental delay. It is not known how reliably markers of iron deficiency identify true iron deficiency, defined as a therapeutic response to oral iron. METHODS: The subjects were members of the Millennium Baby Study cohort. At age 13 months a venous blood sample was taken for mean cell volume (MCV), haemoglobin, mean cell haemoglobin (MCH), ferritin, and zinc protoporphyrin (ZPP). Children with abnormal values were offered treatment with oral iron and dietary modification, and re-sampled after 3 months. RESULTS: Samples were obtained for 462 children. All markers were moderately correlated with each other except ferritin. Treatment was offered to 147 (32%) children with at least one abnormal value, of whom 126 (86%) were re-sampled. Children with a haemoglobin or an MCH below the screening cut off, or with abnormal values for two or more of the remaining three measures, showed a large therapeutic response to iron, but isolated abnormalities of MCV, ZPP, or ferritin were not consistently associated with a response. Of the screened population 13% could be defined as iron deficient (abnormal haemoglobin or MCH, or abnormal levels of two or more of the remaining three markers), but this was not strongly associated with any dietary, demographic, or anthropometric characteristic. CONCLUSIONS: Low total or mean cell haemoglobin in isolation is a specific marker of iron deficiency, but other markers are only predictive when found in combination with other abnormal values.


Subject(s)
Anemia, Iron-Deficiency/diagnosis , Iron/therapeutic use , Anemia, Iron-Deficiency/drug therapy , Anemia, Iron-Deficiency/etiology , Biomarkers/blood , Erythrocyte Indices , Hemoglobins/analysis , Humans , Infant , Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Iron Deficiencies , Poverty , Prospective Studies , Risk Factors , Treatment Outcome
13.
Arch Dis Child ; 89(9): 813-6, 2004 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15321854

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The recommended age of introduction of solids food to the diet of infants (weaning) has recently been increased in the UK to 6 months, but most babies are still weaned before the age of 4 months. AIMS: To examine what predicts the age of weaning and how this relates to weight gain and morbidity using data from a population based cohort. METHODS: Parents of 923 term infants born in a defined geographical area and recruited shortly after birth were studied prospectively using postal questionnaires, weaning diaries, and routinely collected weights, of whom 707 (77%) returned data on weaning. RESULTS: The median age of first weaning solids was 3.5 months, with 21% commencing before 3 months and only 6% after 4 months of age. Infants progressed quickly to regular solids with few reported difficulties, even when weaned early. Most parents did not perceive professional advice or written materials to be a major influence. The strongest independent predictors of earlier age at weaning were rapid weight gain to age 6 weeks, lower socioeconomic status, the parents' perception that their baby was hungry, and feeding mode. Weight gain after 6 weeks was unrelated to age of weaning. Babies weaned before 3 months, compared to after 4 months, had an increased risk of diarrhoea. CONCLUSIONS: Social factors had some influence on when weaning solids were introduced, but the great majority of all infants were established on solids before the previously recommended age of 4 months, without difficulty. Earlier weaning was associated with an increased rate of minor morbidity.


Subject(s)
Weaning , Age Factors , Breast Feeding , Humans , Hunger , Infant , Infant Food , Mothers/psychology , Prospective Studies , Sex Factors , Socioeconomic Factors , Weight Gain
14.
Eur J Clin Nutr ; 58(9): 1290-6, 2004 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15054405

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To describe the first-week feeding patterns for breast- vs bottle-fed babies, and their association with sustained breast-feeding and infant weight gain at 6 weeks. DESIGN: A longitudinal cohort study. SETTING: Feeding diaries were completed by mothers in an urban UK community shortly after birth; follow-up weight and feeding data were collected at routine health checks. SUBJECTS: Mothers of 923 full-term infants born during the recruiting period agreed to join the study. In all, 502 usable diaries were returned from 54% of the cohort. RESULTS: Breast-fed infants were fed more frequently (2.71 h between feeds) than bottle-fed infants (3.25 h between feeds) and mixed-fed infants (3.14 h between feeds) (P<0.001) in the first week of life, while duration of feeds was similar. Only exclusive breast-feeding in the first week (P<0.001) and maternal education (P=0.004) were related to continued breast-feeding at 6 weeks. Greater first-week feeding frequency (as measured by feed-to-feed interval, h) was associated with higher weight gain at 6 weeks for breast-feeders, but no analysed factors were associated with higher weight gain for bottle-feeders. CONCLUSIONS: This large-scale study of first-week feeding patterns sheds light on the important and complicated issues of breast-feeding continuation and infant weight gain, with implications for the feeding advice given to mothers. Supplementary bottle feeds were clearly associated with discontinued breast-feeding at 6 weeks. Over that period, higher weight gain was associated with more frequent feeding for breast-fed infants only. SPONSORSHIP: Henry Smith Charity, SPARKS, Child Growth Foundation.


Subject(s)
Bottle Feeding/statistics & numerical data , Breast Feeding/statistics & numerical data , Infant, Newborn/growth & development , Mothers/psychology , Weight Gain , Adult , Cohort Studies , Educational Status , Energy Intake , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant Food , Longitudinal Studies , Male
15.
Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed ; 89(3): F254-7, 2004 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15102731

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Although it is a well known phenomenon, limited normative data on neonatal weight loss and subsequent gain are available, making it hard to assess individual children with prolonged weight loss. OBJECTIVE: To establish, using data from a large prospective population based cohort study, norms and limits for postnatal weight loss and its impact on current growth reference charts. METHOD: A cohort of 961 term infants were recruited at birth and followed using parental questionnaires and community nursing returns. Routine weights were collected for half the cohort at 5 days and for all at 12 days and 6 weeks. RESULTS: Less weight loss was seen than the 3-6% suggested by previous studies, but one in five infants had not regained their birth weight by 12 days. Those lightest at birth showed least weight loss. Twenty six (3%) children had more than 10% weight loss, but none showed evidence of major organic disease. Actual weights in the first fortnight are half to one centile space lower than growth charts suggest, while birthweight centiles for children born at 37 weeks were two centile spaces lower. CONCLUSIONS: Neonatal weight loss is brief, with few children remaining more than 10% below birth weight after 5 days. Growth charts are misleading in the first 2 weeks, because they make no allowance for neonatal weight loss.


Subject(s)
Child Development/physiology , Weight Loss/physiology , Age Factors , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Reference Values , Sensitivity and Specificity
16.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry ; 42(7): 971-8, 2001 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11693592

ABSTRACT

Feeding behaviour in the weaning period is important theoretically and practically. The aim of the study was to develop appropriate observational codes for its description, to assess their reliability, and to examine the relationships between feeding behaviour, meal duration, and food intake. One hundred children aged 12-14 months were visited in their own homes, and two of each child's usual meals video-recorded and analysed using direct observation. Codes were developed that distinguished between the mother feeding her child directly and assisting her child's self-feeding, and between the child's behaviour when responding to being fed by the mother and when feeding themselves. All-occurrence sampling was used to record counts of these feeding acts during the meals. Two observers replicated coding of 40 randomly chosen meals to determine the reliability of these counts. Except for three codes which were used very infrequently (median counts of zero over the 200 meals), reliability was high with p > .80. There was wide variation in the extent to which individual children fed themselves during meals, with only moderate consistency from meal to meal. Food intake was uncorrelated with meal duration, but correlated with the number of bites of food taken. Adjusted for the number of bites, longer meals were associated with a lower intake. When fed by the mother the child's food intake was greater than when they fed themselves, but the duration of the meals was little affected. The coding scheme is simple to use and generally reliable, and provides a means for relating more global measures of emotional or other characteristics of mealtime behaviour to feeding behaviour and nutritional intake.


Subject(s)
Feeding Behavior/classification , Mother-Child Relations , Weaning , Adult , Feeding Behavior/psychology , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Mothers/psychology , Reproducibility of Results , Video Recording
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