Abstract

IntroductionPoverty is a well-known risk factor for a child’s health and development. This paper aimed to establish whether poverty negatively affected both intra-uterine growth and early childhood growth, i.e., whether children facing poverty were at a double disadvantage.MethodsFor this study, we made use of routinely collected data on child development throughout early childhood from the 2006–2009 birth cohorts in Kind & Gezin’s Ikaros database collected during 2,605,975 consultations with 273,935 children from birth to 730 days old. Indicators for child development at birth were gestational age and height-at-birth. A standardized height-for-age indicator captured height development throughout early childhood. A multidimensional indicator measured the risk of poverty. For the analysis of development at birth, we used linear and logistic regression; for the analysis of height development during early childhood, we estimated linear and logistic growth curve models.ResultsThe risk of poverty negatively affected both gestational age and height-at-birth. Throughout early childhood, we observed a negative relation between the risk of poverty and height-for-age indicators. However, the effect varied throughout childhood. Children at risk of poverty (over)compensated for their smaller stature at birth, and between ages 6 and 18 months, approximately, the negative effects of risk of poverty decreased substantially or disappeared. However, towards the end of the period studied, children born in households at risk of poverty started to lag again in height development.ConclusionThis study found that the risk of poverty indeed negatively affected a child’s growth, both in utero and in early childhood. However, the results suggest that developmental lags later in childhood were not merely an extension of such lags at birth.

Highlights

  • OPEN ACCESSCitation: Van Rossem R, Pannecoucke I (2019) Poverty and a child’s height development during early childhood: A double disadvantage? A study of the 2006–2009 birth cohorts in Flanders

  • This paper aimed to establish whether poverty negatively affected both intra-uterine growth and early childhood growth, i.e., whether children facing poverty were at a double disadvantage

  • Throughout early childhood, we observed a negative relation between the risk of poverty and height-forage indicators

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Editor: Umberto Simeoni, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois, FRANCE. Poverty is a well-known risk factor for a child’s health and development. This paper aimed to establish whether poverty negatively affected both intra-uterine growth and early childhood growth, i.e., whether children facing poverty were at a double disadvantage

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call