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Showing posts with label Baby. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baby. Show all posts

Friday, September 30, 2011

Mother's Love May Keep the Doctor Away


      An extra dose of motherly nurturing insulates children from lifelong health problems associated with poverty, a new study says. The study found that people whose parents did not finish high school were 1.4 times more likely to develop a condition called metabolic syndrome by middle age than children raised by college-educated parents. Metabolic syndrome is a precursor to diabetes and heart disease. However, among people from less-educated households, those who said they had a very nurturing mother were less likely to develop metabolic syndrome, according to the study published Friday (Sept. 23) in the journal Psychological Science. A nurturing mother in a more educated household had no effect on the likelihood that her adult children had developed metabolic syndrome.Parents' education can be a more reliable indicator of a child's home life than family income, said Lisa Berkman, director of the Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies. Families may fall into low income because of unlucky circumstances such as illness, but still have some of the protective benefits education seems to bring to households.Researchers "often look at education, because it makes a stronger case," said Berkman, who was not involved with the new study. Low income and lack of education are often tied to poor health, but the study suggests that the connections between socioeconomic status and chronic health conditions are not as clear as the effects of genetics and lifestyle, the researchers said. Still, it was striking to see a disadvantaged childhood could manifest in physical disease, said Margie Lachman, a co-author of the new study. "It [childhood experience] shows up under the skin and in the body as an important risk factor," said Lachman, who is the director of the Lifespan Initiative on Healthy Aging at Brandeis University.

Education is not the whole story
       A team of researchers mined data from a subset of 1,200 participants in the decade-long National Survey of Midlife Development in the United States (MIDUS) looking for correlations between socioeconomic status as a child and the risk of metabolic syndrome as an adult. The adult participants filled out questionnaires about their parents' behaviors, and researchers checked their blood pressure, blood sugar, stomach fat and other signs of metabolic syndrome. Previous results from MIDUS showed adults' education levels influence their risk for disability, memory and cognitive reasoning problems, said Lachman, one of the principle investigators on the MIDUS study.
"But not everybody who has low education does poorly in these areas," Lachman said. The study showed that parents' education level was not the single determining factor in children's health: half of children in the least-educated households grew up to develop metabolic syndrome by middle age, but 31 percent of children from college-educated households developed metabolic syndrome, too. And adults from a disadvantaged household who went on to earn higher degrees were still more likely to develop metabolic syndrome than those raised in more-educated households. Nurturing, the results implied, could be one difference that explains why some people go on to live healthy lives despite their circumstances, and others don't. The researchers measured parental nurturing with survey questions such as "How much did she/he understand your problems and worries?" or "How much time and attention did she/he give you when you needed it?" The researchers said that this type of study cannot prove why or how a nurturing mother protects her children's health over the long term.  Yet previous studies have shown "nurturant caregivers imbue children with the sense that the world is a safe place and others can be trusted," the authors from the University of British Columbia and the University of California Los Angeles wrote in the discussion. "These beliefs may enable disadvantaged youngsters to read less threat into their social worlds, with a consequent reduction in the wear-and-tear such vigilance can place on bodily systems," they wrote.
Fathers' nurturing was found not to have an effect in the study, and authors hypothesized that either mothers have a unique contribution to children's health, or that gender roles during the participants' childhood after World War II could have influenced the results.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Pre-pregnancy Fitness, Are You Ready for a Child?

Pregnancy is a big step, you not only have to be ready financially, but physically too.
It takes its toll on your body, so before you even think about it you need to ensure that your body is in near-perfect condition to house a child for the next nine months.
Yet a new study has revealed today that one in five women are obese at the start of their pregnancy, 17 per cent still smoke during and 10-15 per cent suffer from depression or anxiety during the pregnancy.
Based on the view that antenatal care is struggling to keep up with today's lifestyle habits and resulting pregnancy health problems, Tommy's is launching a new health campaign - Tommy's Five Point Pregnancy Plan - in order to reach every mum-to-be in the UK with help and advice on five essential health areas for pregnant women:
  1. nutrition
  2. weight management
  3. exercise
  4. smoking
  5. mental health

A recent survey indicates that women are still confused over calorie comsumption during pregnancy, with 40 per cent thinking you should eat an extra 500 calories a day, or not knowing exactly hoe many more they should eat. An extra 200 calories - the equivalent of two small slices of bread - is all that is recommended and only in the last 12 weeks of pregnancy.
Consequences of being overweight during pregnancy can be very serious - this includes, miscarriage, birth defects, gestational diabetes, pre-eclampsia, complications in labour, long-term health problems for the baby and stillbirth. Obese mothers are twice as likely to experience a stillbirth as mothers within the normal weight range.
Jacqui Clinton, health campaigns director for Tommy's, says: "Poor diet, obesity, lack of physical activity, smoking and mental health problems can all impact on the healthy development of the baby. However, we know changing behaviour and certain habits can be hard, so we want out Five Point Pregnancy Plan to provide support for pregnant women."
The research also found that one in six women don't take an essential folic acid supplement when planning a pregnancy and more than half of women didn't take a vitamin D supplement at all during the nine months - even those that did were unsure about the benefits of it.

To view this article in full please visit:  http://www.femalefirst.co.uk/parenting/parenting-1366.html