“…While birthweight changes are well described in the literature, potential explanatory factors are much less known and these factors explain only parts of the slope of the birthweight trajectories. Most studies suggest that the increasing trends are associated with older maternal age [8, 9, 12-14, 19, 33], increasing maternal body mass index (BMI) [11][12][13][14] and height [15,19], longer gestations [10,12,13,17,19], decreases in smoking [11][12][13][14], decreasing parity [13,15,17], changes in ethnicity [9] and socioeconomic factors [9,15], while the decreases could be related to decreases in the length of gestation [18-20, 22, 25, 28], induction of labour [6,20,22,24,25], and early term caesarean sections [6,20,22,24], increases in primiparity [18,19], and decreased foetal growth [22,23].…”