Abstract

Studies from the social and health sciences have tended to view the household as the locus of access to and distribution of care, resources, monitoring and modeling for children’s wellbeing. Obesity may present a special case for the study of investments in children, being a component of health for which more of certain inputs may not lead to better outcomes. We expanded on common measures of household structure in the child health literature by considering co-residence and relatedness of parents, grandparents, other relatives, and other children. Data were from a longitudinal sample of 6,700 children participating in the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study Kindergarten Class of 1998–99 (ECLS-K), the largest U.S. national dataset with measures of child anthropometrics and household structure at seven time-points over nine years. We used lagged survey-adjusted regressions to estimate associations between household structure and subsequent changes in children’s weight between ages 5 and 14 years in terms of BMI gain and incident obesity. Adjusting for household structure more thoroughly, children living in households with two parents rather than one parent did not experience advantages in terms of less excess weight gain or lower incidence of obesity during elementary and middle school. Children living with a grandmother gained more weight than children not living with a grandmother. Living with siblings and with non-related adults was associated with less weight gain. These findings corroborate a scenario in which, for health problems associated with caloric surplus, classic household factors have more complex associations with child wellbeing.

Highlights

  • Household structure characteristics were defined at each survey wave in terms of number and relatedness of parents in the household; parents’ marital status; co-resident grandmother, other co-residing adult relative, co-residing non-relative adult; coresiding siblings

  • We controlled for child’s sex, race/ethnicity and age; household socioeconomic status (SES scale divided into quintiles for socioeconomic status created by ECLS-K based on parents’ occupational prestige and income [89]); household food-insecurity; mother’s employment; type of school currently attended; U.S region (Northeast, Midwest, South, West); and urbanicity

  • Our findings indicate that one of the major health concerns for children today, obesity, may not be associated in the same way with household structure as are other aspects of child wellbeing

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Summary

Introduction

Household structure and childhood obesity study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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