母乳喂养史、学龄前儿童睡眠与肥胖。

Angel Herring, Jerome Kolbo, Hwanseok Choi, Xiaoshan Z Gordy, Bonnie Harbaugh, Elaine Molaison, Lindsey Hardin, Olivia Ismail
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引用次数: 2

摘要

母乳喂养和睡眠都被认为是儿童健康的医学和生理保护因素。大多数现有研究分别研究了它们对儿童健康结果的影响。很少有研究将这两个因素结合起来探讨母乳喂养史、儿童睡眠时间和儿童健康之间的潜在联系。这项研究试图揭示母乳喂养史、睡眠时间和学龄前儿童肥胖之间的联系,以进一步了解它们对健康结果的保护性生理和心理影响。作为对学龄前儿童肥胖的更大规模研究的一部分,目前的调查探讨了肥胖、母乳喂养史和父母报告的学龄前儿童睡眠总时数之间的关系。他们收集了1,693名3-5岁儿童的实际身高和体重数据,这些儿童在密西西比州有执照的儿童保育机构登记。对人口统计学和父母调查变量进行描述性分析,以探讨密西西比州母乳喂养的相关状况。为了了解母乳喂养与协变量之间的关系,进行了双变量分析,如卡方独立检验、Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel卡方检验和Fisher精确检验。肥胖与母乳喂养呈负相关,白人母亲明显比非裔美国母亲更有可能母乳喂养。肥胖也与睡眠时间呈负相关,据报道,非洲裔美国儿童的睡眠时间明显少于白人儿童。据报道,有母乳喂养史的儿童的平均睡眠时间明显高于那些没有母乳喂养的儿童,这表明母乳喂养可能与学龄前儿童的睡眠有显著的正相关,是肥胖的另一个保护因素。母乳喂养和儿童成熟后的睡眠之间的相互作用是未来研究的一个重要领域,以充分探索它们在家庭健康实践中对抗儿童肥胖和促进其他后续健康结果的基础影响。
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Breastfeeding History, Preschool Children's Sleep, and Obesity.

Breastfeeding and sleep are both considered medically and physiologically protective factors for child health. Most existing research studied their impact on child health outcomes, respectively. Few studies examined the two factors collectively to explore any potential associations among a history of breastfeeding and quantity of sleep in children and child health. This study sought to uncover the association among breastfeeding history, the amount of sleep, and obesity in preschool-aged children to provide additional insights into their protective physical and psychological effects on health outcomes. As part of a larger study examining obesity in preschool children, the current investigation explored the association among obesity, a history of breastfeeding, and the total number of hours of preschool children's sleep, as reported by parents. Actual heights and weights were collected on a total of 1,693 children 3-5 years of age enrolled in licensed child care facilities in Mississippi. Descriptive analyses of the demographic and parent survey variables were conducted to explore the status related to breastfeeding in Mississippi. To understand the relationships between breastfeeding and covariates, bivariate analyses such as chi-square independent tests, Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel chi-square tests, and Fisher's exact tests were performed. Obesity was negatively correlated to breastfeeding, and Caucasian mothers were significantly more likely to breastfeed than African American mothers. Obesity was also negatively correlated to the amount of sleep, and African American children reportedly slept significantly less than Caucasian children. The average amount of time of sleep reported for children with a history of being breastfed was significantly higher than for those who were not breastfed, suggesting that breastfeeding could have a significant positive association with preschool children's sleep, serving as an additional protective factor obesity. The interaction between breastfeeding and subsequent sleep as children mature is an important area for future research to fully explore their foundational impact in family health practices that combat obesity in children and promote other subsequent health outcomes.

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