The effect of parental BMI and parental education on longitudinal trajectories ofchildhood BMI

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Authors

BARTOŠKOVÁ Anna VAN DE GEEST Jet D.S. BOBÁK Martin PIKHART Hynek

Year of publication 2025
Type Appeared in Conference without Proceedings
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

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Description Using data from the Czech ELSPAC cohort (n = 5,151), this study applied latent growth mixture modelling to identify long-term BMI trajectories from childhood to adulthood and their parental determinants. Two trajectories were observed: normative and rising-risk. Higher maternal and paternal BMI increased the odds of rising-risk membership, while higher parental education reduced it. Sex-stratified analyses revealed a strong protective effect of maternal education in daughters only. The findings underscore the role of parental characteristics and child sex in shaping obesity risk across the life course.
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