PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Children born to teen mothers have delayed development, likely due to social factors

2013-10-17
(Press-News.org) TORONTO, Oct. 16, 2013--Babies born to teen mothers have less developed speaking skills at age five than children of older mothers, a new study has found.

"We don't believe that having a baby in your teens is the cause of underdeveloped speaking skills," said Dr. Julia Morinis, the lead author and researcher in the Centre for Research on Inner City Health of St. Michael's Hospital. "It's likely that being a teen mother is a risk factor that indicates poorer circumstance for development opportunities in some cases."

Dr. Morinis points to teen mothers' limited opportunities for education and well-paid jobs or single parenthood as social factors that have a significant negative impact on childhood development.

"Most differences in non-verbal and spatial abilities between these two groups of children can be attributed to significant sociodemographic inequalities in circumstance," said Dr. Morinis. "But for verbal ability, there seems to be more going on."

The study, published online today in the journal Archives of Disease in Childhood, identified parenting involvement – such as playing, reading, and singing with the child – was predictive of higher-level child development.

"In Ontario, we're fortunate to have free services like Early Years Centres that can help offset the effects of being born into a negative social situation," said Dr. Morinis, who is also a staff physician at The Hospital for Sick Children.

Ontario Early Years Centres offer children up to the age of six and their caregivers opportunities to take part in programs and activities together. Early Years Centres, library programs or drop-in play programs are resources Dr. Morinis recommends to families that are concerned about increasing parenting involvement and improving child development.

The study used data from the Millennium Cohort Study, a long-term nationally representative study of almost 19,000 children born between 2000 and 2001 across Britain. These children were assessed for reasoning skills and intelligence when they were five years old.

More research is needed to more closely monitor and engage with families of young parents to determine the differences in their interactions and the child's abilities are.

### Dr. Morinis's research was funded by a scholarship from the Clarendon Fund at the University of Oxford. The Millennium Cohort study was funded by Britain's Economic and Social Research Council.

About St. Michael's Hospital

St Michael's Hospital provides compassionate care to all who enter its doors. The hospital also provides outstanding medical education to future health care professionals in 27 academic disciplines. Critical care and trauma, heart disease, neurosurgery, diabetes, cancer care, care of the homeless and global health are among the Hospital's recognized areas of expertise. Through the Keenan Research Centre and the Li Ka Shing International Healthcare Education Centre, which make up the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, research and education at St. Michael's Hospital are recognized and make an impact around the world. Founded in 1892, the hospital is fully affiliated with the University of Toronto.

Media contacts

For more information, or to arrange an interview with one of the authors, please contact:

Geoff Koehler
Adviser, Media Relations
416-864-6060 ext. 6537
koehlerg@smh.ca


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

The NICU environment: Not all silence is golden

2013-10-17
Cincinnati, OH, October 17, 2013 -- Medical technology has improved the survival rates of premature infants, but adverse developmental outcomes are a continuing problem. Researchers have turned their attention to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU), where premature infants spend their first few weeks or months, for potential answers. In a new study scheduled for publication in The Journal of Pediatrics, researchers studied the relationship between different room types in the NICU and the developmental outcomes of the children at 2 years of age. Research has suggested ...

All probiotics are not the same in protecting premature infants from common, life-threatening illness

2013-10-17
Treating premature infants with probiotics, the dietary supplements containing live bacteria that many adults take to help maintain their natural intestinal balance, may be effective for preventing a common and life-threatening bowel disease among premature infants, researchers at UC Davis Children's Hospital have found. The study, "A comparison of two probiotic strains of bifidobacteria in premature infants," recently was published online in the Journal of Pediatrics. The bowel disease, necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), is the second most common cause of death among ...

Physical activity in parks can been boosted by modest marketing

2013-10-17
Modest increases in marketing and outreach to local communities can increase the amount of physical activity that occurs in parks, providing a cost-effective way to potentially improve a community's health, according to a new RAND Corporation study. The project, which examined 50 parks across Los Angeles, found that simple interventions such as increased signage boosted physical activity by 7 to 12 percent over the study period in relation to parks that did not make changes. The findings are published online by the American Journal of Preventive Medicine. "The study ...

More US teens susceptible to HSV-1 infection, a growing cause of genital herpes

2013-10-17
[EMARGOED UNTIL THURSDAY, OCT. 17] A new study suggests a growing number of U.S. adolescents lack antibodies that may help protect them later in life against an increasingly important cause of genital herpes. Published in The Journal of Infectious Diseases and available online, the findings show that fewer of today's teens have been exposed in their childhood to herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), a common cause of cold sores, than U.S. adolescents in previous years. Without these antibodies, today's teens may be more susceptible—when they become sexually active—to genital ...

Making the business case for cardiac rehab programs

2013-10-17
Montreal − You know the saying: an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. When it comes to cardiac rehabilitation, a study presented today at the Canadian Cardiovascular Congress has the numbers to prove it. "We found that cardiac rehabilitation programs have a financial 'return on investment' of about seven per cent," says author Dr. Dennis Humen, a professor of medicine at Western University. "Not only is cardiac rehab the pillar of preventing a second cardiac event; it also makes good business sense." The study also revealed that, for patients, the 'return ...

A mother's high cholesterol before pregnancy can be passed on to her children

2013-10-17
Montreal − What leads to high cholesterol? Your genes and lifestyle factors may not explain it all. A study presented today at the Canadian Cardiovascular Congress has connected some of the risk for high cholesterol in adults to their mother's cholesterol levels before she even became pregnant. The key finding: if a mother had high LDL ("bad") cholesterol prior to a pregnancy, her children are almost five times as likely to also have high LDL cholesterol as adults. "Maternal health and exposures in the womb may be important in modifying cardiovascular disease ...

Unlocking a brighter future for locked-in syndrome

2013-10-17
Montreal − A team of researchers from Montreal has found that stroke patients living with Locked-In Syndrome (LIS) who cannot move, swallow or even breathe on their own, can regain a remarkable level of independence with technological help. The team's findings, to be presented at the Canadian Stroke Congress, stem from a 20-year study that followed the rehabilitation of 25 LIS patients, people who are aware and awake but cannot move or communicate verbally due to complete paralysis of nearly all voluntary muscles. "These patients can achieve a remarkable level ...

Eye contact builds bedside trust

2013-10-16
CHICAGO --- Doctors who make a lot of eye contact are viewed as more likable and empathetic by patients, according to a new Northwestern Medicine® study. Patients also gave doctors higher empathy scores when their total visit length was longer and when doctors engaged in a few "social touches" such as a handshake or pat on the back. However, more than three social touches in one visit decreased empathy scores. The researchers said it's possible that too many social touches from a doctor may seem forced and not genuine to a patient. The study, published in the Journal ...

UCSB researcher reveals the brain connections underlying accurate introspection

2013-10-16
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– The human mind is not only capable of cognition and registering experiences but also of being introspectively aware of these processes. Until now, scientists have not known if such introspection was a single skill or dependent on the object of reflection. Also unclear was whether the brain housed a single system for reflecting on experience or required multiple systems to support different types of introspection. A new study by UC Santa Barbara graduate student Benjamin Baird and colleagues suggest that the ability to accurately reflect on perceptual ...

New blood test could help millions of patients with gastrointestinal disorders

2013-10-16
LOS ANGELES (Oct. 15, 2013) – For the first time, a simple blood test may be the best way to determine if a patient is suffering from Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), or another serious condition such as Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD,) according to Cedars-Sinai physician researcher Mark Pimentel, MD, lead author of a multicenter clinical trial. Researchers conclusively identified a test for antibodies that form against a particular protein, vinculin, found in the guts of patients, many of whom suffered acute gastroenteritis at some point. "This is a major breakthrough. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Alliance Foundation Trials phase III PATINA study shows promise for patients with HR+, HER2+ metastatic breast cancer

COMET trial finds quality of life similar among patients with low- risk DCIS whether they received active monitoring or surgery

Adjuvant tamoxifen may reduce recurrence risk for patients with ‘good-risk’ DCIS who forgo radiation

COMET trial finds active monitoring is a viable option for some patients with low-risk DCIS

Most patients with intermediate-risk breast cancer may safely avoid chest wall irradiation after mastectomy

Active monitoring with or without endocrine therapy for low-risk ductal carcinoma in situ

Patient-reported outcomes for low-risk ductal carcinoma in situ

Women born prematurely are at greater risk of committing suicide

Bovhyaluronidaze azoximer significantly reduces exercise intolerance in patients with long-term pulmonary sequelae of COVID-19

New insights into the evolution and paleoecology of mosasaurs: most comprehensive study to date

New insights into brain mechanisms underlying empathy

Semiconductor device technology recognized by the "Olympics of Semiconductors"

What brings richness to sparkling wines?

Towards room-temperature superconductivity: Insights into optical properties of bi-based copper-oxide superconductors

World’s smallest molecular machine: reversible sliding motion in ammonium-linked ferrocene

Researchers reveal key factors behind Japan’s plastic waste removal rates in rivers

Implantable sensors are helping scientists improve injury recovery

Improved predictive accuracy of fusion plasma performance by data science

Common brain network links brain atrophy patterns seen in schizophrenia

“Us” vs. “them” biases plague AI, too

Why deep sleep is helpful for memory

Sleepers made from recycled plastic could make railways even more eco-friendly

Ugh, my stomach: Identifying amino acids that prevent sporulation in food poisoning

Air pollution in India linked to millions of deaths

Study finds widening inequalities in child vaccination rates across England

Investigation raises new concerns over landmark trial for top selling anti-platelet drug

Making chemotherapy for Hodgkin lymphoma kinder to patients

ACS study finds early-onset colorectal cancer cases surge globally

Fluctuating blood pressure tied to problems with thinking skills

Scientists find promising new target for antidepressants—in the gut

[Press-News.org] Children born to teen mothers have delayed development, likely due to social factors