Open Access
Symposium on the childhood environment and adult disease, held at the ciba-foundation, london, 15-17 may 1990 - general discussion
Djp. Barker,Michael Rutter,Margit Hamosh,Rm. Murray,Mark A. Hanson,Rk. Chandra,Colin Blakemore,P. Casaer,J. Dobbing,A. Lucas,Ge. Mott,Avshalom Caspi,Mej. Wadsworth,Mpm. Richards,Dl. Wood,Kl. Thornburg,Josef Parnas +16 more
- Vol. 156, pp 224-234
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The article was published on 1991-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 6 citations till now.read more
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Journal ArticleDOI
The maternal and fetal origins of cardiovascular disease.
David J.P. Barker,C. N. Martyn +1 more
TL;DR: This chapter presents evidence that restraint of growth and development during critical periods of fetal life and infancy have an important effect on the development of cardiovascular disease.
Posted ContentDOI
Health, human productivity, and long-term economic growth
TL;DR: The authors investigated the influence of health on the growth paths often industrialized countries over the course of 100 to 125 years, finding that changes in health increased their pace of growth by 30 to 40 percent, altering permanently the slope of their growth paths.
BookDOI
Handbook of cultural developmental science
TL;DR: Goodnow, Goodnow, van De Vijver, Hofer, and Chasiotis as mentioned in this paper, described the main domains of development across cultures and countries in the United States.
Journal ArticleDOI
Endocrine Pancreas Development in Growth-Retarded Human Fetuses
Frédérique Béringue,B. Blondeau,Marie Claire Castellotti,Bernadette Breant,Paul Czernichow,Michel Polak +5 more
TL;DR: The authors' data militate against a primary developmental pancreatic abnormality in human IUGR, leaving peripheral insulin resistance as the most likely mechanism of glucose intolerance in adults born with IUGr.
Journal ArticleDOI
The case for child development as a determinant of health
TL;DR: Biological embedding and the "latency" and "pathways" model incorporate the notion of a critical period in development; the pathways model emphasizes the cumulative effect of life events and the ongoing importance of social/economic-psychosocial conditions throughout the life cycle.