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Exposure to parental smoking and child growth and development: a cohort study - full text

Abstract

Background

Studies on adverse childhood health and development outcomes associated with parental   smoking have shown inconsistent results. Using a cohort of Belarusian children, we   examined differences in cognition, behaviors, growth, adiposity, and blood pressure   at 6.5 years according to prenatal and postnatal exposure to parental smoking.

Methods

Using cluster-adjusted multivariable regression, effects of exposure to prenatal smoking   were examined by comparing (1) children whose mothers smoked during pregnancy with   those of mothers who smoked neither during nor after pregnancy and (2) children whose   mothers smoked during and after pregnancy with those whose mothers smoked after pregnancy   only; effects of postnatal smoking were examined by comparing (1) children whose mothers   smoked after pregnancy only with those of mothers who smoked neither during nor after   pregnancy and (2) children whose fathers smoked with those whose fathers did not smoke   among children of non-smoking mothers after adjusting for a wide range of socioeconomic   and family characteristics.

Results

After adjusting for confounders, children exposed vs unexposed to prenatal maternal   smoking had no differences in mean IQ, teacher-rated behavioral problems, adiposity,   or blood pressure. Children exposed to maternal postnatal smoking had slightly increased   behavioral problems [0.9, 95% CI: 0.6, 1.2 for total difficulties], higher body mass   index [0.2, 95% CI: 0.1, 0.3], greater total skinfold thickness [0.4, 95% CI: 0.04,   0.71], and higher odds of overweight or obesity [1.4, 95 % CI; 1.1, 1.7]. Similar   magnitudes of association were observed with postnatal paternal smoking.

Conclusions

No adverse cognitive, behavioral and developmental outcomes were associated with exposure   to maternal prenatal smoking. Observed associations with postnatal smoking of both   parents may reflect residual confounding by genetic and family environmental factors.

http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/pdf/1471-2431-13-104.pdf

Yang, et al. (2013). "Exposure to parental smoking and child growth and development: a cohort study." BMC Pediatrics, 13:104 doi:10.1186/1471-2431-13-104

 

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