scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinal variation in Chinese height and weight: evidence from the descendants of emigrants to Taiwan.

TLDR
The pattern of change in mean values across provinces of origin suggests that as developmental circumstances become more equal for residents of various provinces in China, already documented declines in mean height differences, particularly in some central and southern provinces, will shrink further.
Abstract
Surveys reveal that Chinese from the southernmost provinces are, on average, consistently shorter and lighter than their peers in provinces to the north, though explanations for this variation differ. The present study helps to distinguish between genetic and developmental explanations by comparing differences in regional and provincial heights and weights of 3184 children born in Taiwan between 1975 and 1980 whose families had emigrated from different regions of China at varying times in the past, but who all lived in a relatively affluent district in Taipei at the time of measurement. Linear regression analyses adjusted heights for measurement age and relevant (and available) socioeconomic and demographic variables. Results of these analyses suggested that clinal genetic variation is an important contributor to regional differences in China. Whether entering primary school or departing middle school, children of northern Chinese ancestry living in Taipei were significantly taller (males, 25–30 mm, p ⩽0.014; females, 18 mm; p ⩽0.008) and heavier (males, 2.5–3.8 kg; p ⩽0.081; females, 0.9–3.4 kg, p ⩽0.046) than those of southern ancestry, with those from central provinces intermediate in most comparisons. Additionally, provincial backgrounds of Taipei middle school girls with family origins in 12 provinces across China and in Taiwan were significantly associated with height ( n =905; p =0.003) and weight ( n =900; p =0.001). The pattern of change in mean values across provinces of origin suggests that as developmental circumstances become more equal for residents of various provinces in China, already documented declines in mean height differences, particularly in some central and southern provinces, will shrink further.

read more

Citations
More filters
Dissertation

Age estimation in the living : a test of 6 radiographic methods

TL;DR: This document breaches copyright and should be removed from the public portal immediately.
Journal ArticleDOI

Associations between height, body mass, and frequency of decayed, extracted, and filled deciduous teeth among two cohorts of Taiwanese first graders

TL;DR: Testing the hypothesis that synergisms between under-nutrition and disease form part of a causal pathway contributing to the risk of deciduous caries suggests that improving nutritional status significantly lowers caries risk, though most variation is probably attributable to other factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of carotid atherosclerotic plaques between subjects in Northern and Southern China: a Chinese atherosclerosis risk evaluation study

TL;DR: Subjects in northern China have significantly larger vessel size and may have a higher prevalence of vulnerable plaques than those in southern China, which provides additional perspective to optimise the management of cerebrovascular disease in individuals in different regions in China.
References
More filters
Posted Content

Social Change and the Family in Taiwan

TL;DR: The Social Change and the Family in Taiwan as discussed by the authors provides an in-depth analysis of the complex changes in family relations in a society undergoing revolutionary social and economic transformation, and explores the patterns and causes of change in education, work, income, leisure time, marriage, living arrangements, and interactions among extended kin.
Book

Social change and the family in Taiwan

TL;DR: In this article, a number of studies by various authors on aspects of the complex changes in family relationships occurring in Taiwan during the islands transformation from a traditional to a socially and economically developed modern society are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Richer and taller: stature and living standards in China, 1979-1995.

Stephen L. Morgan
- 01 Jan 2000 - 
TL;DR: There are wide regional variations in the increases in height, and the better off and faster growing regions have experienced a greater rise in the nutritional status of children, as measured by average height and weight for age, than those living in areas that have witnessed slower economic development.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Second National Growth and Development Survey of Children in China, 1985: children 0 to 7 years

TL;DR: The condition of growth and development of children for both boys and girls from urban or suburban rural areas has been relatively much improved and the urban-rural difference in stature has become smaller, as the increase has been greater in rural areas.
Related Papers (5)