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Psychomotor coordination and intelligence in childhood and health in adulthood - testing the system integrity hypothesis

Psychomotor coordination and intelligence in childhood and health in adulthood - testing the system integrity hypothesis
Psychomotor coordination and intelligence in childhood and health in adulthood - testing the system integrity hypothesis
Objectives: To examine associations between intelligence and psychomotor coordination in childhood and risk of psychological distress, poorer self-rated health, and obesity in adulthood. To investigate whether psychomotor coordination as a potential marker of the construct "system integrity" explains associations between intelligence and these outcomes.
Methods: Participants were members of two British national birth cohorts: the 1958 National Child Development Survey (n = 6147) and the 1970 British Cohort Study (n = 6475). They took tests of psychomotor coordination and intelligence at age 10 to 11 years and reported on their health when in their early 30s.
Results: For a standard deviation increase in psychomotor coordination score, sex-adjusted odds ratios (95% CI) for the 1958 and 1970 cohorts, respectively, were 0.79 (0.72–0.87) and 0.83 (0.77–0.89) for psychological distress, 0.79 (0.73–0.85) and 0.85 (0.78–0.91) for fair/poor self-rated health, and 0.81 (0.75–0.88) and 0.85 (0.78–0.92) for obesity. These associations were independent of childhood intelligence and most remained significant after adjustment for other covariates. Higher intelligence quotient was associated with a reduced risk of psychological distress, fair/poor self-rated health, and obesity in adulthood. These associations were not explained by potential confounding factors or by psychomotor coordination in childhood.
Conclusion: Having better psychomotor coordination in childhood seems protective for some aspects of health in adulthood. Examination of the role played by other markers of the efficiency of the central nervous system may help reveal the extent to which system integrity underlies the link between intelligence and health.
psychomotor coordination, intelligence, psychological distress, obesity, self-reported health
0033-3174
675-681
Gale, Catharine R.
5bb2abb3-7b53-42d6-8aa7-817e193140c8
Batty, G. David
605ce199-493d-4238-b9c8-a2c076672e83
Cooper, Cyrus
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Deary, Ian J.
027158ae-fbfb-40ea-98b1-32d2690499ac
Gale, Catharine R.
5bb2abb3-7b53-42d6-8aa7-817e193140c8
Batty, G. David
605ce199-493d-4238-b9c8-a2c076672e83
Cooper, Cyrus
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Deary, Ian J.
027158ae-fbfb-40ea-98b1-32d2690499ac

Gale, Catharine R., Batty, G. David, Cooper, Cyrus and Deary, Ian J. (2009) Psychomotor coordination and intelligence in childhood and health in adulthood - testing the system integrity hypothesis. Psychosomatic Medicine, 71 (6), 675-681. (doi:10.1097/PSY.0b013e3181a63b2e).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: To examine associations between intelligence and psychomotor coordination in childhood and risk of psychological distress, poorer self-rated health, and obesity in adulthood. To investigate whether psychomotor coordination as a potential marker of the construct "system integrity" explains associations between intelligence and these outcomes.
Methods: Participants were members of two British national birth cohorts: the 1958 National Child Development Survey (n = 6147) and the 1970 British Cohort Study (n = 6475). They took tests of psychomotor coordination and intelligence at age 10 to 11 years and reported on their health when in their early 30s.
Results: For a standard deviation increase in psychomotor coordination score, sex-adjusted odds ratios (95% CI) for the 1958 and 1970 cohorts, respectively, were 0.79 (0.72–0.87) and 0.83 (0.77–0.89) for psychological distress, 0.79 (0.73–0.85) and 0.85 (0.78–0.91) for fair/poor self-rated health, and 0.81 (0.75–0.88) and 0.85 (0.78–0.92) for obesity. These associations were independent of childhood intelligence and most remained significant after adjustment for other covariates. Higher intelligence quotient was associated with a reduced risk of psychological distress, fair/poor self-rated health, and obesity in adulthood. These associations were not explained by potential confounding factors or by psychomotor coordination in childhood.
Conclusion: Having better psychomotor coordination in childhood seems protective for some aspects of health in adulthood. Examination of the role played by other markers of the efficiency of the central nervous system may help reveal the extent to which system integrity underlies the link between intelligence and health.

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More information

Published date: July 2009
Keywords: psychomotor coordination, intelligence, psychological distress, obesity, self-reported health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 71739
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/71739
ISSN: 0033-3174
PURE UUID: d560f012-5064-4e86-b4be-ae94ccb90b17
ORCID for Catharine R. Gale: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3361-8638
ORCID for Cyrus Cooper: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3510-0709

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 22 Dec 2009
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:44

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Contributors

Author: G. David Batty
Author: Cyrus Cooper ORCID iD
Author: Ian J. Deary

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