Preventing childhood obesity from early life is considered essential. However, evidence from recent systematic reviews has highlighted inconsistent results and limited effectiveness of preconception and pregnancy lifestyle interventions regarding offspring weight outcomes and adiposity. Therefore, to improve our understanding regarding the mixed success of these early life interventions, we conducted a scoping review examining intervention complexity, process evaluation components, and authors' statements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Maternal social disadvantage adversely affects maternal and offspring health, with limited research on placental outcomes. Therefore, we examined maternal sociodemographic factor associations with placental and birth outcomes in general (Lifeways Cross-Generation Cohort) and at-risk (PEARS Study of mothers with overweight or obesity) populations of pregnant women.
Methods: TwoStep cluster analysis profiled Lifeways mothers (n = 250) based on their age, parity, marital status, household income, private healthcare insurance, homeowner status, and education.
Introduction: The influence of maternal lifestyle behaviours on placental growth have been investigated individually, but with conflicting results, and their combined effect is under-researched. Therefore, we examined associations between a composite maternal healthy lifestyle score (HLS), and its individual components, during early pregnancy with placental outcomes.
Methods: Participants included Lifeways Cross-Generational Cohort mother-child pairs (n = 202).
Background: Adverse lifestyle factors in the periconception and early life period, including high maternal prepregnancy BMI and excessive gestational weight gain, are important risk factors for childhood obesity. Early prevention is key, but results from systematic reviews of preconception and pregnancy lifestyle interventions have shown mixed success in improving children's weight outcomes and adiposity. We aimed to investigate the complexity of these early interventions and process evaluation components and authors' statements to improve our understanding regarding their limited success.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Aims: Individual macronutrient and micronutrient effects on placental growth have been widely investigated. However, the influence of overall maternal diet is relatively unknown. Therefore, the aim of this study is to examine associations between a range of maternal dietary scores during early pregnancy with placental outcomes, and to investigate whether there is evidence of sexual dimorphism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe 'Developmental Origins of Health and Diseases' hypothesis posits that prenatal maternal diet influences offspring growth and later life health outcomes. Dietary assessment has focused on selected nutrients. However, this approach does not consider the complex interactions between foods and nutrients.
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