Family lifestyle and parental body mass index as predictors of body mass index in Australian children: a longitudinal study

Jun 19, 2001International journal of obesity and related metabolic disorders : journal of the International Association for the Study of Obesity

How Family Lifestyle and Parents' Weight Are Linked to Children's Weight in Australia Over Time

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Abstract

Obesity in fathers is associated with a four-fold increase in the risk of obesity in 18-year-old offspring.

  • BMI in 18-year-old sons is negatively predicted by physical fitness and positively by alcohol intake, while daughters show a significant negative association with physical fitness only.
  • Mothers' and fathers' BMI significantly predict offspring BMI independently of lifestyle factors, explaining 48% of variance in daughters and 33% in sons.
  • Offspring with overweight or obese fathers or mothers consistently had higher BMI across the 9-year survey period.
  • Physical fitness at ages 12, 15, and 18 is negatively related to obesity in fathers for daughters and mothers for sons.
  • Alcohol intake in sons is significantly related to parental alcohol intake, while daughters show a significant association only with fathers' alcohol consumption.

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Full Text

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