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Discover Pediatric Collections on COVID-19 and Racism and Its Effects on Pediatric Health

American Academy of Pediatrics
Article

Childhood Cumulative Risk and Obesity: The Mediating Role of Self-Regulatory Ability

Gary W. Evans, Thomas E. Fuller-Rowell and Stacey N. Doan
Pediatrics January 2012, 129 (1) e68-e73; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2010-3647
Gary W. Evans
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Thomas E. Fuller-Rowell
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Stacey N. Doan
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Abstract

Objectives: We tested whether early childhood risk exposures are related to weight gain in adolescence and evaluate an underlying mechanism, self-regulatory behavior, for the risk-obesity link.

Methods: Cumulative risk exposure to 9 sociodemographic (eg, poverty), physical (eg, substandard housing), and psychosocial (eg, family turmoil) stressors was assessed in 244 nine-year-old children. BMI was calculated at age 9 and then 4 years later. At age 9, children’s ability to delay gratification as an index of self-regulatory behavior was assessed. Path analyses were then estimated to evaluate our mediational model (Cumulative risk → Self-regulation → BMI) over a 4-year period in a prospective, longitudinal design.

Results: Nine-year-old children exposed to a greater accumulation of multiple risk factors show larger gains in adiposity over the next four year period, net of their initial BMI. These gains in BMI during early adolescence are largely accounted for by deteriorated self-regulatory abilities among children facing more cumulative risks.

Conclusions: Early childhood risk exposure leads to larger gains in BMI in adolescence. Given the importance of childhood adiposity to the development of obesity later in life, understanding the underlying mechanisms that link early experience to weight gain is an essential task. Deficiencies in self-regulation in response to chronic stress appears to be an important agent in the obesity epidemic.

KEY WORDS
  • BMI
  • chronic stress
  • cumulative risk
  • obesity
  • self-regulation
  • Abbreviations:
    DLPC —
    dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
    PFC —
    prefrontal cortex
    • Accepted September 9, 2011.
    • Copyright © 2012 by the American Academy of Pediatrics

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    Pediatrics
    Vol. 129, Issue 1
    1 Jan 2012
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    Childhood Cumulative Risk and Obesity: The Mediating Role of Self-Regulatory Ability
    Gary W. Evans, Thomas E. Fuller-Rowell, Stacey N. Doan
    Pediatrics Jan 2012, 129 (1) e68-e73; DOI: 10.1542/peds.2010-3647

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    Childhood Cumulative Risk and Obesity: The Mediating Role of Self-Regulatory Ability
    Gary W. Evans, Thomas E. Fuller-Rowell, Stacey N. Doan
    Pediatrics Jan 2012, 129 (1) e68-e73; DOI: 10.1542/peds.2010-3647
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    • Overweight Adolescents and Life Events in Childhood
    • A Prospective Study of Positive Early-Life Psychosocial Factors and Favorable Cardiovascular Risk in Adulthood
    • Nine-year-old children exposed to more sociodemographic, physical and psychosocial risks tend to have poorer self-regulatory behaviour and are more likely to show an increase in BMI during the next 4 years
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