FIRST BORN WOMEN MORE LIKELY TO BE OBESE
Firstborn women are more likely to be
overweight/obese as adults than their second-born sisters,finds the largest
study of its kind in women, and published online in the Journal
of Epidemiology & Community Health.
The
findings back up similar research on the impact of male birth order, and prompt
the researchers to ponder whether shrinking family size might not be
contributing to the observed rise in adult body mass index (BMI) around the
globe.
The
researchers wanted to find out if birth order affected adult women's height and
weight as it appears to among adult men.
They
therefore drew on data from the Swedish Birth Register, which was started in
1973, and which contains information dating back to the first antenatal visit
on virtually all (99%) births in Sweden.
They
focused on the time period 1991-2009 for women who were at least 18 years old
at the time of their first pregnancy, and who had been born to a mother who was
similarly at least 18 years old at the time. Twins were not included in the
study.
Weight
and height were measured and information collected on current health,
lifestyle, and family history at the first antenatal visit.
In
all, 303,301 girls were born between 1973 and 1988, who gave birth between 1991
and 2009, 206,510 of whom were first or second born.
Of
these, complete data were available for 13, 406 sister pairs (just under 29,000
participants in total). The researchers wanted to look at sisters to try and
take account of shared genetic and environmental influences in early life.
At
birth, firstborns were very slightly lighter than their second born sisters,
but as adults during their first three months of pregnancy, their BMI was
marginally higher (2.4%) than that of their second born sisters.
They
were also 29% more likely to be overweight and 40% more likely to be obese than
their second born sisters. And they were marginally taller (1.2 mm).
The
number of children in a family was not associated with BMI or the odds of being
overweight/obese, but having more siblings was associated with shorter height
and lower odds of being tall, possibly attributable to the 'resource dilution
hypothesis' which holds that there's less to go around as a family grows in
size, suggest the researchers.
This
is an observational study so no definitive conclusions can be drawn about cause
and effect, and only young women were included in the study. But the findings
back up similar research in adult male firstborns, say the researchers.
And
they point to mounting evidence which suggests that firstborns may be more at
risk of health problems, such as diabetes and high blood pressure, in later
life than their siblings, although the potential underlying triggers for these
differences are far from clear, they say.
"Our
study corroborates other large studies on men, as we showed that firstborn
women have greater BMI and are more likely to be overweight or obese than their
second born sisters," they write.
And
they conclude: "The steady reduction in family size may be a contributing
factor to the observed increase in adult BMI worldwide, not only among men, but
also among women."
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