Severe deprivation in early childhood leads to permanent growth stunting: Longitudinal analysis of height trajectories from childhood-to-adulthood
Severe deprivation in early childhood leads to permanent growth stunting: Longitudinal analysis of height trajectories from childhood-to-adulthood
Background
Childhood institutional deprivation is associated with growth stunting in childhood but long-term effects in adulthood remain uncertain.
Objective
To examine the impact of global institutional deprivation experienced in early childhood on subsequent growth with a special focus on final adult height and puberty timing.
Participants & setting
The study was originally set in the UK, though some adoptive families lived abroad by the time of the adult follow up. 165 individuals adopted by UK families before 43 months of age from Romanian orphanages after the fall of the Ceaușescu regime in the early 1990's were compared to 51 non-deprived UK adoptees, adopted before the age of 6 months.
Methods
The English and Romanian Adoptees (ERA) study is a 20-year longitudinal natural experiment on the effects of institutional deprivation on development. Key growth milestones were extracted from growth curve modelling of height data collected at ages 4, 6, 11, 15 and 23 years using a Bayesian approach to fit the JPA2 model.
Results
Deprivation effects on height were present at the take-off point of accelerating adolescent growth and persisted into adulthood – the largest effects being for individuals who experienced over six months of deprivation. Deprivation was associated with earlier take-off and achievement of peak height velocity of adolescent growth acceleration – an effect driven largely by females' data and correlated with parent ratings of pubertal development.
Conclusions
Early deprivation appears to reset tempo of growth early in development leading to permanent growth stunting in adulthood and accelerated onset of puberty, specifically in females.
Sonuga-Barke, Edmund
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Hanc, Tomasz
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Stehli, Annamarie
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Trampush, Joey W.
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Kennedy, Mark
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Kreppner, Jana
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Rutter, Michael
bf7ac926-6fd4-4e09-bc9a-6d9cf8368326
Swanson, James M.
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Sonuga-Barke, Edmund
180c5d1b-8848-41e4-ba25-2b6461a05b5e
Hanc, Tomasz
704ee27f-5c7d-4caa-9275-70863fa67f13
Stehli, Annamarie
e6b040dd-69d7-4151-936a-8de0697a4c7b
Trampush, Joey W.
8101b974-c392-4bee-a4d4-c1f708ec34ec
Kennedy, Mark
1078185d-57d9-41fc-8d41-5f7ee3335b5e
Kreppner, Jana
6a5f447e-1cfe-4654-95b4-e6f89b0275d6
Rutter, Michael
bf7ac926-6fd4-4e09-bc9a-6d9cf8368326
Swanson, James M.
189edce0-05ac-4906-8241-cd9e11423506
Sonuga-Barke, Edmund, Hanc, Tomasz, Stehli, Annamarie, Trampush, Joey W., Kennedy, Mark, Kreppner, Jana, Rutter, Michael and Swanson, James M.
(2021)
Severe deprivation in early childhood leads to permanent growth stunting: Longitudinal analysis of height trajectories from childhood-to-adulthood.
Child Abuse & Neglect.
(doi:10.1016/j.chiabu.2021.105427).
Abstract
Background
Childhood institutional deprivation is associated with growth stunting in childhood but long-term effects in adulthood remain uncertain.
Objective
To examine the impact of global institutional deprivation experienced in early childhood on subsequent growth with a special focus on final adult height and puberty timing.
Participants & setting
The study was originally set in the UK, though some adoptive families lived abroad by the time of the adult follow up. 165 individuals adopted by UK families before 43 months of age from Romanian orphanages after the fall of the Ceaușescu regime in the early 1990's were compared to 51 non-deprived UK adoptees, adopted before the age of 6 months.
Methods
The English and Romanian Adoptees (ERA) study is a 20-year longitudinal natural experiment on the effects of institutional deprivation on development. Key growth milestones were extracted from growth curve modelling of height data collected at ages 4, 6, 11, 15 and 23 years using a Bayesian approach to fit the JPA2 model.
Results
Deprivation effects on height were present at the take-off point of accelerating adolescent growth and persisted into adulthood – the largest effects being for individuals who experienced over six months of deprivation. Deprivation was associated with earlier take-off and achievement of peak height velocity of adolescent growth acceleration – an effect driven largely by females' data and correlated with parent ratings of pubertal development.
Conclusions
Early deprivation appears to reset tempo of growth early in development leading to permanent growth stunting in adulthood and accelerated onset of puberty, specifically in females.
Text
Severe deprivation in early childhood leads to permanent growth stunting Longitudinal analysis of height
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 1 December 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 9 December 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 452684
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452684
ISSN: 0145-2134
PURE UUID: 5c3fbfd9-0aaa-43bf-861b-1110f978b3f8
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 11 Dec 2021 11:37
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:13
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Contributors
Author:
Edmund Sonuga-Barke
Author:
Tomasz Hanc
Author:
Annamarie Stehli
Author:
Joey W. Trampush
Author:
Mark Kennedy
Author:
Jana Kreppner
Author:
Michael Rutter
Author:
James M. Swanson
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