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Growth, Nutrition and Economy

Authors :
Michael Hermanussen
Christiane Scheffler
Lidia Martin
Detlef Groth
James G. Waxmonsky
James Swanson
Natalia Nowak-Szczepanska
Aleksandra Gomula
Anna Apanasewicz
Jan M. Konarski
Robert M. Malina
Sylwia Bartkowiak
Lidia Lebedeva
Andrej Suchomlinov
Vsevolod Konstantinov
Werner Blum
Yehuda Limony
Raja Chakraborty
Sylvia Kirchengast
Janina Tutkuviene
Egle Marija Jakimaviciene
Ramune Cepuliene
Daniel Franken
Bárbara Navazo
Annang G. Moelyo
Takashi Satake
Slawomir Koziel
Source :
Human Biology and Public Health, Vol 1 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Universitätsverlag Potsdam, 2021.

Abstract

Twenty-three scientists met at Krobielowice, Poland to discuss the role of growth, nutrition and economy on body size. Contrasting prevailing concepts, re-analyses of studies in Indonesian and Guatemalan school children with high prevalence of stunting failed to provide evidence for an association between nutritional status and body height. Direct effects of parental education on growth that were not transmitted via nutrition were shown in Indian datasets using network analysis and novel statistical methods (St. Nicolas House Analysis) that translate correlation matrices into network graphs. Data on Polish children suggest significant impact of socioeconomic sensitivity on child growth, with no effect of maternal money satisfaction. Height and maturation tempo affect the position of a child among its peers. Correlations also exist between mood disorders and height. Secular changes in height and weight varied across decades independent of population size. Historic and recent Russian data showed that height of persons whose fathers performed manual work were on average four cm shorter than persons whose fathers were high-degree specialists. Body height, menarcheal age, and body proportions are sensitive to socioeconomic variables. Additional topics included delayed motherhood and its associations with newborn size; geographic and socioeconomic indicators related to low birth weight, prematurity and stillbirth rate; data on anthropometric history of Brazil, 1850-1950; the impact of central nervous system stimulants on the growth of children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder; and pituitary development and growth hormone secretion. Final discussions debated on reverse causality interfering between social position, and adolescent growth and developmental tempo.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
27489957
Volume :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Human Biology and Public Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5c2fd711fb7b4e25b861791859bbff7f
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.52905/hbph.v1.1