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Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

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Page 1: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Hserv 482 Session 6

Human development

&

early life

effects on later health

FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISEDue in 2 weeks

Page 2: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

LAST CLASS SummarySubjective well-being (SWB), happiness as a national

indicator is culture dependent

SWB has not improved over time or with increasing wealth this past century

SWB correlates with equality, human rights, fulfillment of basic human needs

US SWB has declined since the early 1970s, and the declines have been greater in women

USA does not fare well in most health outcomes in comparison with other rich countries, happiness not doing so well either and trends are in the unfortunate direction

NEXT: EARLY LIFE effects

Page 3: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Summary to hereDefining health, considering what produces it

– Mortality (objective), well-being happiness (subjective)

US not that healthy compared to other countries in many health outcomes, including well-being.

Range of hierarchy (gap between rich and poor) is related to health in a society) and this reflects amount of caring and sharing present there

WHEN DOES HIERARCHY MATTER MOST?

Page 4: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Agenda

Look at comparative data on child health

Fetal development and programming

Infancy and biological embedding

Population health perspective

Intergenerational aspects

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impact of early life on adult health?

STUDENT THOUGHTS?

How important?

Page 6: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

impact of early lifeon adult health?

STUDENT THOUGHTS?

How to study?

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In any discussion 3 questions to ask:

What are the facts?

What are the interpretations of those facts.

What are the presuppositions behind the interpretations.

Page 8: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Making Transition Work for Everyone: Poverty and Inequality in Europe and Central Asia, World Bank 2001

Page 9: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Child Health among rich countries

Collison et. al. 2007 Public Health

BE

TT

ER

HE

AL

TH

MORE EQUALITY

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Child Poverty Olympics (2005)

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UN

ICE

F L

eagu

e T

able

of

Chi

ld A

buse

Dea

ths

Page 12: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

UNICEF League Table of Child Well-Being

Page 13: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

UNICEF League Table of Child Well-Being

Page 14: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks
Page 15: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

UNICEF League Table of Child Well-Being

Page 16: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

UNICEF League Table of Child Well-Being

Page 17: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Pickett et. al. 2007

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Studies on outcomes in childhoodCDC states (US health 1998) : "A healthy childhood

is a foundation of success and health in later life. pg 46

Infants born to mothers of lower socioeconomic status tended to have poorer health, as measured by their rates of low birth weight and infant mortality."

"Several measures of health status ... indicated that children from lower SES families had worse health status and more risk factors for poor health"

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Hispanic ParadoxRoseto issues?

Page 20: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks
Page 21: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

most important factor influencing child health is SES

behaviors can't have much to do with the health of a child, or infant--– they don't smoke, drink, shoot guns (much)

Expect downstream effects from SES:– environmental quality (more exposure to lead among US

poor)– nurturing child rearing environments (fewer in US poor)– poor more likely to undertake adverse health behaviors

• smoking• drinking• injection drug use

AT WHAT LEVEL DOES SES ACT?

Page 22: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

BASIC IDEA SO FAR

SES matters for children's health

our children don't seem to be doing so well lately

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Next step:

What might this have to do with adult health?– seems obvious that it should, – does what happens in early childhood impact adult

health?

Study fetal programming (life long changes) of adult disease

Biological embedding (after birth)

Page 24: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

David Barker in UKCoronary Heart Disease mortality rates correlated

with birth weights – UK archives in Hertfordshire, Preston and Sheffield had

detailed records going to early 1900s– have birth weights, obstetrical records with body

proportions and placenta weights and growth in infancy,

– (birth data from 1911-1930 followed to present)

conditions in early life PROGRAM later effects in adults (fetal origins hypothesis)– animal experiments show that undernutrition

(stress) in utero leads to persisting changes in variety of metabolic, endocrine and immune functions (in later life)

Page 25: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Barker

newborns small at birth (for dates, because they failed to grow, rather than premature), were at risk for adult heart disease

highest prevalence of Type 2 Diabetes in people who were small at birth and obese as adults

studies replicated in US, Finland and South India and see similar association with hypertension, and diabetes (UK, US, Sweden)

Page 26: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

have critical periods of fetal development (coincide with rapid cell division), – If lack of nutrients or oxygen (or stress), rate of cell

division is slowed

poor fetal growth (thinness) results in insulin resistance

thin neonate lacks skeletal muscle and fat, but brain is spared (fetus, when stressed, tries to make sure brain gets enough nutrients, sparing muscle)

fetal Glucocorticoids (cortisol) – Fetal cortisol effects cell differentiation

– placenta is barrier to maternal glucocorticoids but can have deficiency in enzyme establishing barrier so get fetal glucocorticoid elevations in response to maternal stress

Barker

Page 27: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Newsweek September 27, 1999

Page 28: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

fetal nutritionpoor nutrition (stress) impairs growth during

critical periods of fetal life and permanently affects structure and physiology of endocrine pancreas, liver, blood vessels

fetal nutrition depends on: 1. mother's dietary intakes

2. mother's nutrient stores• sheep studies show that maternal undernutrition in mid-

pregnancy has profoundly different effects on fetal and placenta growth depending on whether mother entered pregnancy with high or low nutritional stores

Page 29: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

fetal nutrition3. fetal nutrition depends on

– mother's nutritional state AT TIME OF CONCEPTION• conditions then reflects particular sensitivity of early embryo growth

to concentration of nutrients– in fetus with fast growth trajectory, placenta may consume fetal amino

acids to maintain lactate (energy) production,

– nutrient delivery to placenta– placenta's transfer capabilities

4. Age of mother– mature mothers optimize flow of nutrients to fetus– adolescent mothers may thrive at expense of fetus

5. Hormonal programming (fetus produces cortisol)

WOMB WITH A VIEW

Page 30: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

womb with a view

Page 31: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Maternal nutrition (stress) in pregnancySUMMARY

Early pregnancy undernutrition (stress) leads to large placenta

Nutrition (stress) in mid-trimester effect depends on maternal stores (stress) when entered pregnancy– maternal stores conditioned by mother's early life, and

her mother (intergenerational---fetus' grandmother)

Nutrition (stress) in third trimester effect depends on whether fetus is growing rapidly or not – Rapid growth rates could result in placenta consuming

fetal protein to produce lactate energy stores and resulting fetal wasting

Page 32: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Biological embedding Growth in infancy

Growth mainly from development and enlargement of existing cells, rather than addition of new ones

Babies short at birth tend to grow slowly after birth

Low rates of infant weight gain predict CAD in men– (not sure if growth in later childhood can be protective)– low weight gain leads to LV hypertrophy in childhood

and adulthood

Page 33: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Biological embedding of early life experiencesRapid neuronal (brain) cell growth in fetus and by birth have pretty well

all your neurons (Central Nervous System CNS)– Neurons are then "sculpted" ie neuron-to-neuron connections reinforced, others

suppressed

Child's early years spend in unstimulating, emotionally and physically unsupportive environments adversely affects brain development– leads to cognitive, social & behavioral delays– results in acute & chronic stress in school

CNS "talks to" hormone, immune and clotting systems leading to systematic differences in experience of life to increase or decrease resistance to disease via long-term function of vital organs as expression of SES (gradient)

BIOLOGICAL EMBEDDING is effect of human experience on health over life course (Hertzman)

Page 34: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Biological embedding mechanismsHPA axis (hypothalamo pituitary adrenal)

– handling in rats, during early life permanently changes way HPA axis responds over life course (handling reduces total lifetime exposure of corticosterone to brain) (Meany)

– highly reactive rhesus monkeys have higher cortisol (Suomi)• later show more depressive-like behaviors with separation, longer HPA

activation, rapid noradrenergic turnover (related to maternal attachment) which remain stable throughout development & appear heritable (epigenetic)

Baboons (Sapolsky) four factors lead to variation in basal cortisol levels in the wild

1. rank of a baboon2. troop social stability & its enforcement

– lack of violence and coercion

3. animal's experience of rank, stability and enforcement 4. personality and coping styles

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Social Emotional Regulationvia early attachmentto a mother figure

Harlow and wire-cloth motherovercame food as need

See quieter stress response, lower cortisol levels whenmonkey in front of motherleading to secure attachment(Suomi)

Page 36: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks
Page 37: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks
Page 38: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Gorilla

Bonobo

Orangutan

Gibbon

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0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

Birth 6 mo. 1 2 5 10 15 AdultAge

Synaptic Density

Visual

Auditory

Prefrontal

Synaptic Density

Rivkin, 2000: 70

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Summary so far:Health in early childhood patterns SES of the

mother/(father)

Early childhood has profound impacts on adult health

Fetal programming is a major mechanism throughfetal-placenta relationshipendocrine aspects

early growth retardation, and compensatory catch-up later leads to obesity

Biological embedding (early life experiences)

Page 41: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

population health perspectivecross-sectional studies like the UNICEF charts,

demonstrate there is a problem, but hard to tease out where it comes from

Ideally: cohort studies, following people from before birth, gathering data at conception, or before– best available is at first ante-natal visit

Birth-onwards cohort studies

Page 42: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

prospective cohort studies to look at life course issues,

What matters over various parts of a life, from being a gleam in your

parents' eyes to death?

Page 43: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

1958 British Birth Cohort Study

Everyone born in UK (England, Scotland and Wales) in week of March 3-9, 1958 – included more than 17,000 subjects

follow up at age 7, 11, 16, 23, and most recently at 33 years

Page 44: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Impacting health at age 33 years from early childhood?

Latent effects – impacts adult health independent of

intervening experience

Pathway effects

– early life sets trajectories that affect health status over time, such as education

Cumulative effects

– intensity and duration of exposure of unfavorable environments adversely affects health, (usually dose-response)

Page 45: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

BirthBirthDeathDeath

Contributions to Self-rated Health at Age 33, 1958 British Birth Cohort

““pathway” factors:pathway” factors:

““latent” factors:latent” factors:

““cumulative” factors:cumulative” factors:

Page 46: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

BirthBirthDeathDeath

MACRO Socio-EconomicEnvironment

Meso Civil Society

micro Social

Network

Contributions to Self-rated Health at Age 33, 1958 British Birth Cohort

Page 47: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

BirthBirthDeathDeath

““pathway/cumulative” pathway/cumulative” factors:factors: OR=6.15OR=6.15

Contributions to Self-rated Health at Age 33, 1958 British Birth Cohort

““latent” factors: latent” factors: OR=5.03OR=5.03

Page 48: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

BirthBirthDeathDeath

MACRO Socio-EconomicEnvironment

OR=1.87

Meso Civil Society OR=2.05

micro Social

Network

OR=N.S.

Contributions to Self-rated Health at Age 33, 1958 British Birth Cohort

““Intersecting” Intersecting” factors: factors: OR=3.83OR=3.83

Page 49: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

BirthBirthDeathDeath

MACRO Socio-EconomicEnvironment

OR=1.87

Meso Civil Society OR=2.05

micro Social

Network

OR=N.S.

““pathway/cumulative” pathway/cumulative” factors: OR=6.15factors: OR=6.15

Contributions to Self-rated Health at Age 33, 1958 British Birth Cohort

““latent” factors: latent” factors: OR=5.03OR=5.03

““Intersecting” Intersecting” factors: factors: OR=3.83OR=3.83

Page 50: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

socio-economic circumstances birth to age 16

Latent factors that matter most:– read to consistently– how easily adjusted to school– fraction of adult health reached by age 7

HIERARCHY?

Page 51: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Of all aspects of children’s early environment, the family’s socioeconomic status is most powerfully associated with children’s cognitive skills when they enter school. … the influence of socioeconomic status during early childhood years appears to be stronger than SES in later years. Children in single-parent families are at greater risk for poor developmental outcomes. There are a few critical periods in brain development during which impairment of stimulation of the nerve pathways will forever limit functioning

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Page 53: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Social Expenditure on Family Benefits

CanadaCanada 0.510.51 66

Australia Australia 1.361.36 55

USAUSA 0.22 0.22 77

NorwayNorway 1.91 1.91 33

SwedenSweden 2.232.23 11

FinlandFinland 1.901.90 44

FranceFrance 2.132.13 22

Source: OECD Social Expenditure Database Source: OECD Social Expenditure Database (1998)(1998)

% of GDP Rank

Page 54: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Low-wage earners, social expenditures and percent lone-parent households

Percent of full-time workers

earning less than 65% of median earnings (1994)

Social expenditures on

the non-elderly as percent of GDP

(1999)

Percent of households that are lone parent

United States 25% (highest) 2.8 (lowest) 10.6 (most)

Canada 23% 6.0 7.3

United Kingdom 20% 6.4 9.0

Germany 13% 8.9 4.0

Netherlands 12% 10.5 3.5

Belgium 7% 8.9 4.3

Finland 6% 12.1 5.7

Sweden 5% 12.6 7.9

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Parental Leave, Child Care OECD 94Ranked by Social Transfer %Share GDP 1995 Parental Leave (wks) Separate Maternal

Leave (wks)Gov't Payments

Infant.Care %GDP

High social-transfer benefits

Sweden 62 1.36

Finland 26-156 17.5 1.08

Denmark 10-52 18 1.21

Norway 52 0.91

Belgium 130 15 0.08

France 0-156 16 0.24

Intermediate transfer budgets

W. Germany 156 14 0.27

Italy 26 22 0.10

United Kingdom (none) 14+40 0.35

Austria 112 16 n.a.

Low transfer budgets

Switzerland (1988) 8-12 8-12 n.a.

New Zealand 52 0.04

Canada 10 17 0

Australia 52 52 0.19

United States (unpaid) 12 0.01

Japan 52 14 0

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only countries that don'tPapua New GuineaLesotho, Swaziland

United States of America

164 countries have laws saying those who work

are guaranteed paid maternity leave.

Page 57: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Intergenerational AspectsMaternal constraint : limited capacity of mother to

deliver nutrients to fetus

Mothers constrain fetal growth to the degree they were constrained themselves in utero

Fathers influence fetal growth trajectories only when maternal constraint to fetal growth is relaxed

Benefit for fetus to adapt to level of nutrition over many years (generations) may be important in places with periodic famines

Page 58: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

The daughterIs the motherOf the woman

Page 59: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

The daughterIs the motherOf the woman

Page 60: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

pathwaypathway

latentlatent

cumulativecumulative

Page 61: Hserv 482 Session 6 Human development & early life effects on later health FIRST DISSEMINATION EXERCISE Due in 2 weeks

Genetics AdultSOCIAL SUPPORT

STRESS in Adult Life

Cope

Breakdown

Susceptible+

-

+

-

Resistant

Cope

Cope

S O C I E T A L F A C T O R S

Early Childhoodbiological embedding

in uteroprogramming

maternal stress

maternalgrandparentsmaternal constraint

adolescent

mature

+

-

+

-

+

-

+

-

+

-

+

Relaxed (fathers matter)

Population test of family situation on child health?