Title: Children and Food Poverty
1Children and Food Poverty
- Professor Cecily Kelleher
- National Nutrition Surveillance Centre,
- School of Public Health and Population Science
- University College Dublin
2Background and ContextFriel et al, WP 04/01
Combat Poverty Agency 2004
- Achieving a healthy diet is a major challenge to
people in poverty - Access to good quality, reasonably priced and
nutritious food is a real issue - Socially disadvantaged eat less well but spend
relatively more on food - A two parent two child family on lowest income
spends 40 weekly on food, compared to 17 in
highest income group
3Factors contributing to Dietary Habits
Knowledge, Behaviour, Attitude
Food Supply
Food Consumption
Environment
Social
Health Impact
4Household Food Purchasing Patterns
Household Budget Surveys 1951-1994, Central
Statistics Office, Ireland
5Household Purchasing Fresh Fruit
Social Class
Household Budget Surveys 1951-1994, Central
Statistics Office, Ireland
6Food Poverty and Health Findings from Health
Behaviour in School-aged Children (HBSC) in
Ireland Molcho et al (2005)
- 16 of Irish pupils (19 boys and 14 girls)
report food poverty - Associated with poorer diet generally
- More frequent mental and somatic symptoms, poor
health and low life satisfaction
7Social position As a Risk Factor for ill-health
8Infant Mortality and its Causes Woodbury RM, 1926
9The midwife, the coincidence and the
hypothesisBarker D, BMJ 2003 3271428-1430
- Do adverse conditions in utero increase the risk
of cardiovascular diseases in later life? - Retrospective cohort study of 15,000 men and
women born in Hertfordshire before 1930, followed
up for disease-specific mortality through NHS
registry a half century later
10Barker Hypothesis (1995)
- Fetal undernutrition in middle to late gestation,
which leads to disproportionate fetal growth,
programmes later coronary heart disease
11The database established by Ethel Margaret
Burnside from 1911
- Weight at birth and at 1 year old using spring
balance - Health visitor records illnesses and
developmental milestones on a card - Recorded in ledgers and maintained today at
University of Southhampton
12The Fetal Origins Hypothesis-10 years onBMJ
2005 3301096-1097
- Highest risk of CHD is for individuals born small
who become heavier in childhood - Stunted children are a high risk of becoming
overweight - Adult diseases are not programmed as such, but
the tendency towards a disease is programmed - Events pre birth are important but we need to
consider later modifiers too
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14Life-course epidemiology
- Age adjusted RR mortality for men with manual
worker fathers - 1.52 CHD
- 1.83 stroke
- 1.65 lung cancer
- 2.06 stomach cancer
- 2.01 respiratory disease
15Why is Cross-generation Transmission important to
Public Health?
- It elucidates possible patho-physiological
explanations for disease-specific outcomes across
the life-course - It provides a more complete contextual
explanation for the determinants of health and
well-being - It has policy implications for mother and child
services generally
16Pregnancy and NutritionGambling McCardle, Proc
Nut soc 2004 63 553-62
- Pregnancy is a period of rapid growth and cell
differentiation for both mother and fetus - Consequently, both are vulnerable to changes in
dietary supply, especially of those nutrients
marginal in normal circumstances - In developed countries where calorie intake is
adequate, this vulnerability applies mainly to
micronutrients
17Examples of Dietary deficiencies relevant to
intra-uterine growth in pregnancy
- Neural tube defects associated with folate
deficiency especially in first trimester - Iron (Fe) deficiency, especially during second
and third trimesters - Copper (Cu) deficiency shown to have neurological
consequences in animal studies - More recent interest in omega-3 fatty acids (e.g.
from fish) associated with various long-term
health outcomes
18Diet during Pregnancy, Neonatal outcomes and
later healthMoore Davies Reprod Fertil Dev
2005 17341-8
- Animal experiments clearly show that maternal
diet can influence offspring birth size, adult
health and lifespan - Among western society women maternal smoking is
key - Consequences of inadequate maternal nutrition may
depend on timing during gestation, reflecting
critical windows for fetal development
19Examples of Longitudinal studies
- 1947, 1958 and UK Millenium Birth cohorts
- ALSPAC and ELSPAC studies
- New millenium cohorts in Denmark, France, US,
Australia, Netherlands - Lifeways Study
- National longitudinal study of Children in Ireland
20Aims and Objectives of Lifeways
- Determine health status, diet and lifestyle
- To establish patterns and links across
generations - To document primary care utilisation patterns
across the social spectrum and across generations - To examine how indicators of social position,
particularly means-tested GMS eligibility
influences health status during first 5 years of
life
21Lifeways Study Design
- Sample
- 1124 mothers-to-be recruited during their first
ante-natal visit in the University College
Hospital in Galway (West) and the Coombe Hospital
in Dublin (East) between October 2001 and January
2003 - 1055 babies
- 355 fathers and 1231 grandparents
22Data Collected to Date
- Instruments
- Health, lifestyle and nutrition questionnaire all
adults 2001 and 2006 (self-completed) - Electronic mother and child ante-natal/birth
hospital record (Euroking) - HSE Immunisation record of all infants and
children - Parent held child study record on babys health
events during the 5 first years (self-completed
in sub-sample) - General Practice follow-up data in 628 general
practices around country
23Lifeways mothers
31 West 69 East
29.4 years-old (/- 5.98) Range 14 to 43 years
64 are married
Household net weekly Income 343 (S.D. 196) 24
below 60 poverty line
18 hold a medical card
24 smokers
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25The Cardiovascular Risk Factor Profile of
Grandparents and its Contribution to Infant
Birth-weight in the Life-ways Cross-generation
Cohort StudyKelleher CC et al., Prevention and
Control 2005 1(1) 54.
- Birth weight
- Range 840 5360 grams
- Mean 3491 grams (S.D. 584.4)
- What predicts baby birth weight ?
- Mother
- Age, smoking status, education, GMS, marital
status, BMI - Maternal Grandmother
- BMI, Maternal Grand-Parent Education
26Lifeways Babies at a glance
49.7 male 50.3 female 12 sets of
twins All turn 4 at next birthday
27Data structure
- Mothers clinical records
- Age
- Breastfeeding
- Smoking
- Babies GP records
- ASTHMA
- GMS eligibility
- Mothers questionnaires
- Nutrition
- Education
- Income, medical insurance
- Exposure to smoke in home
- Pollution
- Mould damp in home
- Social support
- Marital status
- Self-rated health
- Babies clinical records
- Sex
- Birthweight
- Birth hospital
Time
Baseline (birth)
3 years
28Multivariate Analysis to predict asthma in
children at 3 years
- Babies with low and high birth-weights were at
higher risk of asthma than those in the middle of
the range. - Boys at higher risk of asthma than girls.
- Babies born in Dublin at higher risk than those
born in Galway - Babies born to families in the lowest income
quartile (lt300/week) at higher risk of asthma - Babies born to mothers who reported consuming low
levels of added fats and high levels of fruit and
vegetables were at lower risk of asthma.
29Multivariate Analysis - results
30Paediatric Percentile Growth Charts
31Early adiposity rebound in childhood and risk of
type 2 diabetes in adult lifeEriksson JG et al,
Diabetologia 2003 46 190-194
- Type 2 Diabetes is associated with small body
size at birth and a high BMI in later life - Longitudinal follow-up of 8760 adults born in
Helsinki 1934-1944 - Each had 18 measurements of height and weight
between birth and 12 years - Cumulative incidence of adult type 2 diabetes
decreased progressively from 8.6 to 1.8
depending on timing of adiposity rebound
32Long term mortality after severe starvation
during the 1941-1944 siege of Leningrad
Prospective Cohort StudySparen et al BMJ 2004
32811
- 3905 men born 1916-35 in Leningrad, examined
1975-7 with mortality follow up to 1999 - SBP 3.3 mm higher in siege exposed at puberty
- Relative risk of IHD 1.39, Stroke 1.67 and
haemorrhagic stroke 1.71
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35Food Control or Food Democracy? Re-engaging
Nutrition with Society and the Environment Tim
Lang, Pub Health Nut 2005 8(6a) 730-737
- Biologically reductionist versus social process
models - Misunderstanding of what drives the relationship
between policy, evidence and practice - Geo-spatial crisis over food supply
- Excess choice plus information overload may be
nutritions problem, not solution
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37Predictors of Obesity (SLÁN, 2002)
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39140 calories
350 calories
333 calories
590 calories
210 calories
610 calories
40Obesity in Children a problem Compounded by
Victim Blaming
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42Shopping for fruit for one person last week
- 5 Bananas (St Lucia) 1.99
- 400g Strawberries (Dublin) 4.49
- 400g Grapes (Greece)3.40
- 170g Raspberries (USA) 3.99
- 150g Blueberries (Australia) 4.90
- 4 Kiwis (NZ) 1.85
- 3 L Orange juice 11.40
- 240g Pineapple 2.99
- Total 36.61 Euros
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44High-Tech increases Body Weight
Cellular phones and remote controls deprive us
from walking!
20 times daily x 20 m 400 m
Walking distance lost/year400x365 146,000 m
146 km 25 h of walking
1 h of walking 113-226 kcal
Energy saved 2800-6000 kcal
? 0.4-0.8 kg adipose tissue
Rössner, 2002
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46Child poverty in English-speaking Countries
Mickelwright J (Innocenti Working Papers no. 94,
June 2003)
- English-speaking countries notably higher rates
of child poverty than continental European
countries - UK, Irl and NZ all saw large rises in child
poverty in last 20 years and all have explicit
commitment to problem - Tax benefit simulations suggest between 1996/7
and 2003/4 resulted in 1 million fewer UK
children below conventional poverty line
47Heckman (2006) Ulysses Medal Lecture UCD
48Acknowledgements
- The Lifeways cross-generation cohort study is
grant supported by the Health Research Board of
Ireland - It is overseen by a multi-disciplinary steering
committee from University College Dublin,
National University of Ireland Galway, The Health
Services Executive, The Coombe and UCHG Maternity
Hospitals