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Predicting obesity in young adulthood from childhood and parental obesity
R Obert C. W Hitaker,J Effrey,A. W Right,M Argaret,S. P Epe,K Risty D. S Eidel,W Illiam H. D Ietz +6 more
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The article was published on 2010-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 692 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Parental obesity & Young adult.read more
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PEDIATRIC ORIGINAL ARTICLE Tackling childhood overweight: treating parents exclusively is effective
TL;DR: The parents’ treatment had significant effects on child and parent BMI, and the positive effects of time in the waiting-list control group for some psychological outcome measures needs to be studied.
Journal ArticleDOI
Dietary intake is related to multifactor cardiovascular risk score in obese boys
Tracy L. Schumacher,Tracy Burrows,Dylan P. Cliff,Rachel A. Jones,Anthony D. Okely,Louise A. Baur,Philip J. Morgan,Robin Callister,May Boggess,Clare E. Collins +9 more
TL;DR: This multifactor CVD risk score could be a useful tool for researchers to identify elevated risk in children and further research is warranted to examine sex-specific dietary factors related to CVDrisk in children.
Journal Article
The Correlations between Cardiorespiratory Fitness Levels and Body Mass Index, Metabolic Syndrome Risk Factors, Homeostasis Model Assessment-Insulin Resistance and High Sensitivity C-Reactive Protein in Male High School Students
TL;DR: This study found that there are close correlations between cardiorespiratory fitness and BMI, metabolic syndrome risk factors, HOMA-IR, and hsCRP and showed that, compared to lower levels of cardiorespiratory fitness, higher levels had beneficial effects on BMI, metabolism syndromerisk factors, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease risk factors.
PEDIATRIC HIGHLIGHT Associations between severity of obesity in childhood and adolescence, obesity onset and parental BMI: a longitudinal cohort study
TL;DR: The impact of parental BMI on the severity of obesity in children is strengthened as the child grows intoolescence, whereas the age at onset is probably of less importance than previously thought.
References
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Longitudinal data analysis using generalized linear models
Kung Yee Liang,Scott L. Zeger +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, an extension of generalized linear models to the analysis of longitudinal data is proposed, which gives consistent estimates of the regression parameters and of their variance under mild assumptions about the time dependence.
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Increasing Prevalence of Overweight Among US Adults: The National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys, 1960 to 1991
TL;DR: Observed trends in overweight prevalence and body mass index of the US adult population suggest that the Healthy People 2000 objective of reducing the prevalence of overweight US adults to no more than 20% may not be met by the year 2000.
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Long-term morbidity and mortality of overweight adolescents. A follow-up of the Harvard Growth Study of 1922 to 1935.
TL;DR: Overweight in adolescence predicted a broad range of adverse health effects that were independent of adult weight after 55 years of follow-up and was a more powerful predictor of these risks than overweight in adulthood.
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Body weight and mortality among women
JoAnn E. Manson,Walter C. Willett,Meir J. Stampfer,Graham A. Colditz,David J. Hunter,Susan E. Hankinson,Charles H. Hennekens,Frank E. Speizer +7 more
TL;DR: A J-shaped relation between body-mass index and overall mortality is observed and when women who had never smoked were examined separately, no increase in risk was observed among the leaner women, and a more direct relation between weight and mortality emerged.
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Do Obese Children Become Obese Adults? A Review of the Literature
TL;DR: Although the correlations between anthropometric measures of obesity in childhood and those in adulthood varied considerably among studies, the associations were consistently positive and the risk of adult obesity was at least twice as high for obese children as for nonobese children.