The Christchurch Health and Development Study comprises 1,265 children born in 1977. The 23 children who received no diphtheria/pertussis/tetanus (DPT) and polio immunizations had no recorded asthma episodes or consultations for asthma or other allergic illness before age 10 years; in the immunized children, 23.1% had asthma episodes, 22.5% asthma consultations, and 30.0% consultations for other allergic illness. Similar differences were observed at ages 5 and 16 years. These findings do not appear to be due to differential use of health services (although this possibility cannot be excluded) or con-founding by ethnicity, socioeconomic status, parental atopy, or parental smoking.
A mother's prepregnancy obesity has been suggested as a risk factor for having offspring with an abdominal wall defect. We evaluated this hypothesis among 104 cases of gastroschisis--a severe birth defect of the abdominal wall most prevalent in infants of young women--and 220 controls with no defect. Using Quetelet's index (QI = weight in kg/height in m2) as a measure of body mass, we found a higher risk of gastroschisis (odds ratio (OR) = 3.2; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.4-7.3) for underweight mothers (QI<18.1 kg/m2) and a lower risk (OR = 0.2; 0.05-0.9) for overweight mothers (QI>28.3 kg/m2) as compared with mothers of normal weight. As QI was correlated to height, with the correlation varying according to mother's ethnicity and age, we adjusted for these factors in the analysis; the adjusted values approximated the unadjusted values. Evaluation of QI as a continuous variable showed that, for every unit increase in QI, the risk for gastroschisis decreased by about 11%. Sociodemographic, pregnancy, and nutrient factors did not confound the association. These results suggest that low prepregnancy body mass rather than obesity is a risk factor for gastroschisis.
Objective
: As in other English‐speaking countries, asthma is a major and increasing health problem in New Zealand. This study examined the risk factors for asthma in children aged 7–9.
Methods
: Cases and controls were randomly selected from participants in the Wellington arm of the International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC). Cases were children with a previous diagnosis of asthma and current medication use (n=233), and controls were children with no history of wheezing and no diagnosis of asthma (n=241).
Results
: After controlling for confounders, factors significantly associated with asthma were maternal (OR=3.36, 95% Cl 1.88–5.99) and paternal asthma (OR=2.67, 95% Cl 1.42–5.02), and male sex (OR=1.81, 95% Cl 1.17–2.81). Children from social classes 5 and 6 or with unemployed parents (OR=2.32, 95% Cl 1.22–4.44) were significantly more likely to have asthma than children in social classes 1 and 2. There was no significant association between having polio vaccination (OR=2.48, 95% Cl 0.83–7.41), hepatitis B vaccination (OR=0.66, 95% Cl 0.42–1.04) or measles/mumps/rubella vaccination (OR=1.43, 95% Cl 0.85–2.41) and asthma.
Conclusions
: This study has confirmed the associations of family history and lower socio‐economic status with current asthma in 7–9 year old children. The role of vaccinations requires further research.
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