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Journal Article

Citation

Whitley E, Gale CR, Deary IJ, Kivimaki M, Singh-Manoux A, Batty GD. Eur. Psychiatry 2013; 28(4): 219-224.

Affiliation

Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, 1-19, Torrington Place, London WC1E 6BT, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.eurpsy.2012.01.005

PMID

22541368

PMCID

PMC3696866

Abstract

PURPOSE: Individuals scoring poorly on tests of intelligence (IQ) have been reported as having increased risk of morbidity, premature mortality, and risk factors such as obesity, high blood pressure, poor diet, alcohol and cigarette consumption. Very little is known about the impact of parental IQ on the health and health behaviours of their offspring. METHODS: We explored associations of maternal and paternal IQ scores with offspring television viewing, injuries, hospitalisations, long standing illness, height and BMI at ages 4 to 18 using data from the National Child Development Study (1958 birth cohort). RESULTS: Data were available for 1446 mother-offspring and 822 father-offspring pairs. After adjusting for potential confounding/mediating factors, the children of higher IQ parents were less likely to watch TV (odds ratio (95% confidence interval) for watching 3+ vs. less than 3hours per week associated with a standard deviation increase in maternal or paternal IQ: 0.75 (0.64, 0.88) or 0.78 (0.64, 0.95) respectively) and less likely to have one or more injuries requiring hospitalisation (0.77 (0.66, 0.90) or 0.72 (0.56, 0.91) respectively for maternal or paternal IQ). CONCLUSIONS: Children whose parents have low IQ scores may have poorer selected health and health behaviours. Health education might usefully be targeted at these families.


Language: en

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