Maternal exposure to stress and risk of obesity in children aged 5-15 years living in a deprived urban Peruvian community.
Rougeaux, E.; Fewtrell, M.; Bernabe-Ortiz, A.; Song, C.; Eaton, S.; Wells, J.; Fottrell, E.
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Objectives Increased risk of childhood obesity up to age six years has been linked to higher maternal allostatic load (AL), the physical manifestation of repeated stress exposure. However, associations are less evident when using psychological stress indicators, and data mainly come from higher income countries. Using psychological and physiological stress markers, this study evaluates maternal stress exposures and child risk of obesity in Peruvian women and their children, ages 5 to 15 years, living in a disadvantaged urban area. Methods Maternal stress exposures included mental distress (12-item General Health Questionnaire scores of 5+ for moderate/high and <5 for no/low distress) and AL (lower/moderate/higher AL assessed from Latent Profile Analysis of hair cortisol, BMI, waist circumference, systolic and diastolic blood pressure). Child outcomes included BMI-for-age and waist circumference-for-age z scores (BAZ and WCAZ). Linear regression analyses were conducted, adjusting for confounders and reported as coefficients and 95% confidence intervals (95% CI). Results Versus mothers with no/low distress, those with moderate/high distress had children with 0.40 (95% CI: -0.66,-0.13) and 0.32 lower (-0.53,-0.11) child BAZ and WCAZ respectively. Versus lower AL mothers, moderate AL mothers had children with 1.15 (0.41,1.88) and 0.74 (0.20,1.28) greater BAZ and WCAZ while higher AL mothers had children with 1.43 (0.95,1.92) and 0.91 (0.50,1.32) greater BAZ and WCAZ respectively. Conclusions Children of mothers with higher AL were at greater risk of overweight or obesity, which may add to the rising burdens of non-communicable diseases in resource-constrained settings as well as the related social, economic, and public health costs.
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