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Exposure to air pollution, smoking may lead to childhood obesity: Study

A recent study reveals that the exposure to smoking, both maternal smoking during pregnancy and second-hand smoking during childhood, air pollution as well as certain characteristics of the built environment may lead to obesity in children. The authors used data on Body Mass Index, waist circumference, skinfold thickness and body fat mass to determine the children's overweight and obesity status.

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Published : Jun 29, 2020, 4:53 AM IST

New Delhi: Exposure to smoking, both maternal smoking during pregnancy and second-hand smoking during childhood, air pollution as well as certain characteristics of the built environment may be associated with a higher development of obesity in children, according to a recent study.

The authors used data on body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, skinfold thickness and body fat mass to determine the children's overweight and obesity status.

Blood and urine samples from the children and their mothers during pregnancy were also analysed.

Read:Coronavirus lockdown worsen childhood obesity globally: Study

In total, 77 pregnancy and 96 childhood exposures were assessed, including air pollutants, built environment, green spaces, smoking, and chemical pollutants (persistent organic pollutants, heavy metals, phthalates, phenols and pesticides.

The findings of the study, which used data collected before anti-COVID-19 measures were introduced, were in line with global trends: the combined prevalence of overweight and obesity was 29 per cent for the study population as a whole, with a higher percentage.

Read:'Obese people face mental, physical problems in corona times'

The results showed that exposure to smoking (both maternal smoking during pregnancy and second-hand smoking during childhood), air pollution (PM2.5 and PM10 particulate matter and nitrogen dioxide, indoor and outdoor) as well as certain characteristics of the built environment were associated with a higher childhood BMI.

However, differences in socioeconomic status did not explain these findings.

(ANI Report)


Also Read:Obesity in India: a major health concern

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