Abstract

Background: Parental health status had a potential influence on offspring health. This study aimed to investigate the separate associations between paternal and maternal cardiovascular health statuses and the prevalence of childhood overweight and obesity in the offspring.Methods: Data were from a cross-sectional study conducted in seven provinces or cities of China in 2013. A total of 29,317 children aged 6–18 years old and their parents, making up 9,585 father-offspring pairs and 19,732 mother-offspring pairs, were included in the final analysis. Information on parental cardiovascular health status factors (dietary behaviors, body mass index (BMI), smoking, physical activity, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus) was obtained from the structured self-administrated questionnaires. Based on the health status factors, we then generated an ideal cardiovascular health (iCVH) score. The overweight and obesity of children were defined using age- and sex-specific cutoffs based on the International Obesity Task Force criteria. A multilevel log-binomial regression model was used to assess the association between parental cardiovascular health status and prevalence of childhood overweight and obesity in the offspring.Results: The prevalence of pediatric overweight and obesity was 22.0% in the father-offspring subset and 23.8% in the mother-offspring subset, respectively. Fathers with ideal BMI, non-smoking, and absence of hypertension and diabetes, and mothers with ideal BMI, ideal physical activity, and absence of hypertension and diabetes were found to be associated with lower prevalence of overweight and obesity in the offspring. The prevalence of offspring overweight and obesity was significantly decreased with the parental iCVH scores increased. Each additional increase in paternal and maternal iCVH factor was associated with a 30% and 27% lower prevalence of overweight and obesity in the offspring. Compared with children whose parental iCVH scores ≤ 3, offspring whose fathers or mothers met all six iCVH factors had 67% [prevalence ratio (PR): 0.33, 95%CI: 0.25–0.42] and 58% (PR: 0.42, 95%CI: 0.29–0.62) lower prevalence of overweight and obesity, respectively.Conclusions: Parental adherence to iCVH status was associated with a lower prevalence of pediatric overweight and obesity in offspring. Our findings support the intervention strategy that parents should involve in the obesity intervention program for children.

Highlights

  • Overweight and obesity in children and adolescents have become an increasingly serious public health concern worldwide

  • The association of individual parental health-related factors with offspring overweight and obesity has been widely investigated previously, few have assessed the effect of overall parental cardiovascular health status on pediatric overweight and obesity in their offspring

  • Based on intergenerational transmission and stronger beneficial effects in overall cardiovascular health factors, we aim to investigate the associations of parental individual and combined cardiovascular health factors, namely, ideal dietary behavior, ideal body mass index (BMI) status, non-smoking, regular moderate to vigorous physical activity, absence of hypertension, and absence of diabetes mellitus, with the prevalence ratio (PR) of childhood overweight and obesity in their offspring, and to analyze the influence of paternal and maternal cardiovascular health on overweight and obesity in boys and girls

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Summary

Introduction

Overweight and obesity in children and adolescents have become an increasingly serious public health concern worldwide. Pediatric overweight and obesity are influenced by multiple factors, among them parental health status has been regarded as one of the most important ones. The association of individual parental health-related factors with offspring overweight and obesity has been widely investigated previously, few have assessed the effect of overall parental cardiovascular health status on pediatric overweight and obesity in their offspring. Previous studies have shown that the intergenerational association of the same sex seemed to be stronger due to the role of genetics and epigenetics [14]; it is unclear whether paternal and maternal health statuses have different degrees of influences on offspring obesity risk. This study aimed to investigate the separate associations between paternal and maternal cardiovascular health statuses and the prevalence of childhood overweight and obesity in the offspring

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