Yu, B., Zachrisson, H. D., Cheesman, R., Ystrom, E., Nes, R. B. (2023): Boys with overweight status lagged behind girls with overweight status in reading: evidence from mendelian randomization

I: Journal of Clinical Epidemiology. Online first. 

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Authors

Baeksan Yua, Henrik Daae Zachrisson, Rosa Cheesman, Eivind Ystrom, Ragnhild Bang Nes.

Abstract

Objectives

We investigated the relationship between childhood weight status and academic achievement across sexes and different school subjects in Norway.

Study Design and Setting

We used data from the Norwegian Mother, Father and Child Cohort Study (MoBa), which includes genetic data (N 5 13,648, 8-year-old children). We employed within-family mendelian randomization, using a body mass index (BMI) polygenic risk score as an instrument to address unobserved heterogeneity.

Results

Contrary to most previous findings, we observed that overweight status (including obesity) has more detrimental effects on reading achievement in boys than in girls; the test scores of boys with overweight were about a standard deviation lower than those of normal weight boys, and the negative effects on reading achievement became stronger in the later grade.

Conclusion

Previous obesity prevention studies have mainly targeted girls, based on the assumption that the obesity penalty is greater for girls. Our findings highlight that particular attention to boys with overweight may help reduce the existing gender gap in academic achievement.

Publisert 27. juni 2023 10:05 - Sist endret 27. juni 2023 11:12