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

Long-term poverty but not family instability affects children's cognitive development

Family hardship, family instability and cognitive development

2011-04-21
(Press-News.org) Children from homes that experience persistent poverty are more likely to have their cognitive development affected than children in better off homes, reveals research published ahead of print in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.

Family instability, however, makes no additional difference to how a child's cognitive abilities have progressed by the age of five, after taking into account family poverty, family demographics (e.g. parental education and mother's age) and early child characteristics, UK researchers found.

There is much evidence of the negative effects of both poverty and family structure on child development, particularly persistent poverty and adverse living conditions. Poverty and family instability are linked as poverty affects families economically and socially and can increase the risk of relationship break-ups.

However, less is known about their relative impact on children's cognitive functioning.

UK researchers from the Institute of Education at the University of London and the Institute of Psychiatry at Kings College London studied data collected for the Millennium Cohort Study (MCS), a survey of 18,819 babies born between September 2000 and January 2002 into 18,553 families living in the UK.

Data were collected from parents through personal interviews and self-completion questionnaires and direct assessment of children's cognitive ability. In 2006, at the age of five years, 15,246 families took part in the survey, which gave the researchers complete data on cognitive assessments for 14,682 children including complete data on all relevant measures for 8,874 children and their mothers.

They looked at family poverty, family transitions, family demographics, and housing conditions – assessed when the child was nine months, three years, and five years old – and their impact on children's cognitive ability.

Analysis of the results showed that most families (62.1%) were identified as not being poor at any of the three assessment time points, and 13% of families experienced persisting poverty.

Most parents were stably married (56.6%), and about a tenth were either continuously cohabiting with the same partner (12.7%) or continuously single (7.8%).

Just under a quarter of mothers who cohabited when their child was aged nine months were married when the child was five (usually to the biological father). In addition, about 10% of the single mothers had entered marriage by 2006.

Children growing up in stable two-parent families showed higher levels of cognitive ability than those in one-parent families or those who experienced a change in living arrangements.

By contrast, children exposed to ongoing poverty scored seven points less in the naming vocabulary test (part of the cognitive assessments) than those who had never experienced poverty.

Analysis showed that there was no significant association between family structure/family instability and cognitive ability after allowing for child characteristics, family poverty and family demographics.

Overall, the researchers found there was a strong and significant negative effect of persistent income poverty on a child's cognitive functioning at the age of five.

They conclude: "Persistent poverty is a crucial risk factor undermining children's cognitive development – more so than family instability."

INFORMATION:

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Adaptive trial designs could accelerate HIV vaccine development

2011-04-21
In the past 12 years, four large-scale efficacy trials of HIV vaccines have been conducted in various populations. Results from the most recent trial—the RV144 trial in Thailand, which found a 31 percent reduction in the rate of HIV acquisition among vaccinated heterosexual men and women—have given scientists reason for cautious optimism. Yet building on these findings could take years, given that traditional HIV vaccine clinical trials are lengthy, and that it is still not known which immune system responses a vaccine needs to trigger to protect an individual from HIV ...

Material that if scratched, you can quickly and easily fix yourself, with light not heat

2011-04-21
Imagine you're driving your own new car--or a rental car--and you need to park in a commercial garage. Maybe you're going to work, visiting a mall or attending an event at a sports stadium, and you're in a rush. Limited and small available spots and concrete pillars make parking a challenge. And it happens that day: you slightly misjudge a corner and you can hear the squeal as you scratch the side of your car--small scratches, but large anticipated repair costs. Now imagine that that you can repair these unsightly scratches yourself--quickly, easily and inexpensively. ...

Repeated stress in pregnancy linked to children's behavior

2011-04-21
Research from Perth's Telethon Institute for Child Health Research has found a link between the number of stressful events experienced during pregnancy and increased risk of behavioural problems in children. The study has just been published online in the latest edition of the top international journal Development and Psychopathology. Common stressful events included financial and relationship problems, difficult pregnancy, job loss and issues with other children and major life stressors were events such as a death in the family. Lead author, Registered Psychologist ...

Antimalarial trees in East Africa threatened with extinction

2011-04-21
NAIROBI (21 April 2011)— Research released in anticipation of World Malaria Day finds that plants in East Africa with promising antimalarial qualities—ones that have treated malaria symptoms in the region's communities for hundreds of years—are at risk of extinction. Scientists fear that these natural remedial qualities, and thus their potential to become a widespread treatment for malaria, could be lost forever. A new book by researchers at the World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF) and the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI), Common Antimalarial Trees and Shrubs of ...

Singapore's first locally made satellite launched into space

2011-04-21
Singapore's first indigenous micro-satellite, X-SAT, lifted off on board India's Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle PSLV-C16 at 10.12am Indian Standard Time (12.42pm, Singapore time) on 20 April 2011. The X-SAT, developed and built by Singapore's Nanyang Technological University (NTU), in collaboration with DSO National Laboratories, was launched from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh, India. The wholly made-in-Singapore satellite was one of the two "piggyback" mission satellites loaded on the PSLV-C16 rocket owned by the Indian Space Research ...

ESHRE sets standards for cross-border reproductive care

2011-04-21
The Guide aims to ensure high-quality assisted reproduction treatment as defined by the European Union criteria for good quality medical treatment and the ESHRE position paper on Good clinical treatment in Assisted Reproduction. Although in principle foreign and local patients should be treated the same and with the best possible treatment, there is evidence that this is not always the case. The Guide is based on the core principles in health care: 'equity', 'safety', 'efficiency', 'patient centeredness', 'timeliness' and 'effectiveness'. The principle of equity means ...

What's your gut type?

Whats your gut type?
2011-04-21
In the future, when you walk into a doctor's surgery or hospital, you could be asked not just about your allergies and blood group, but also about your gut type. Scientists at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) in Heidelberg, Germany, and collaborators in the international MetaHIT consortium, have found that humans have 3 different gut types. The study, published today in Nature, also uncovers microbial genetic markers that are related to traits like age, gender and body-mass index. These bacterial genes could one day be used to help diagnose and predict outcomes ...

International scientists warn of growing threat of wheat rust epidemics worldwide

2011-04-21
ALEPPO, SYRIA (20 April 2011): Researchers meeting at a scientific conference in Aleppo this week reported that aggressive new strains of wheat rust diseases – called stem rust and stripe rust – have decimated up to 40% of farmers' wheat fields in recent harvests. Areas affected are North Africa, the Middle East, Central Asia and the Caucuses, including Syria, Egypt, Yemen, Turkey, Iran, Uzbekistan, Morocco, Ethiopia, and Kenya. “These epidemics increase the price of food and pose a real threat to rural livelihoods and regional food security,” said Mahmoud Solh, Director ...

Contemporary climate change alters the pace and drivers of extinction

2011-04-21
Local extinction rates of American pikas have increased nearly five-fold in the last 10 years, and the rate at which the climate-sensitive species is moving up mountain slopes has increased 11-fold, since the 20th century, according to a study soon to be published in Global Change Biology. The research strongly suggests that the American pika's distribution throughout the Great Basin is changing at an increasingly rapid rate. The pika (Ochotona princeps), a small, hamster-looking animal sensitive to climate, occurs commonly in rocky talus slopes and lava flows throughout ...

Beams of electrons link Saturn with its moon Enceladus

Beams of electrons link Saturn with its moon Enceladus
2011-04-21
Data from NASA's Cassini spacecraft have revealed that Enceladus, one of Saturn's diminutive moons, is linked to Saturn by powerful electrical currents - beams of electrons that flow back and forth between the planet and moon. The finding is part of a paper published in Nature today. CAPS, one of the instruments on board Cassini which made the electron beam discovery, includes a electron sensor called CAPS-ELS – led by UCL (University College London). Since Cassini's arrival at Saturn in 2004 it has passed 500km-wide Enceladus 14 times, gradually discovering more of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New species of tiny pumpkin toadlet discovered in Brazil highlights need for conservation in the mountain forests of Serra do Quiriri

Reciprocity matters--people were more supportive of climate policies in their country if they believed other countries were making significant efforts themselves

Stanford Medicine study shows why mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines can cause myocarditis

Biobanking opens new windows into human evolution

Sky-high smoke

AI tips off scientists to new drug target to fight, treat mpox

USC researchers develop next-generation CAR T cells that show stronger, safer response in animal models

New study reveals Industrial Revolution’s uneven health impacts across England

Vine-inspired robotic gripper gently lifts heavy and fragile objects

Fingerprint of ancient seafarer found on Scandinavia’s oldest plank boat

Lunar soil analyses reveal how space weathering shapes the Moon’s ultraviolet reflectance

Einstein’s theory comes wrapped up with a bow: astronomers spot star “wobbling” around black hole

Danforth Plant Science Center to lead multi-disciplinary research to enhance stress resilience in bioenergy sorghum

Home-delivered groceries improve blood sugar control for people with diabetes facing food insecurity

MIT researchers identified three cognitive skills we use to infer what someone really means

The Iberian Peninsula is rotating clockwise according to new geodynamic data

SwRI, Trinity University to study stable bacterial proteins in search of medical advances

NIH-led study reveals role of mobile DNA elements in lung cancer progression

Stanford Medicine-led study identifies immune switch critical to autoimmunity, cancer

Research Alert: How the Immune System Stalls Weight Loss

Glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist use and vertebral fracture risk in type 2 diabetes

Nonadherence to cervical cancer screening guidelines in commercially insured US adults

Contraception and castration linked to longer lifespan

An old jeweler’s trick could unlock next-generation nuclear clocks

Older age, chronic kidney disease and cerebrovascular disease linked with increased risk for paralysis and death after West Nile virus infection

New immune role discovered for specialized gut cells linked to celiac disease

A new ‘hypertropical’ climate is emerging in the Amazon

Integrated piezoelectric vibration and in situ force sensing for low-trauma tissue penetration

Three-hit model describes the causes of autism

Beech trees use seasonal soil moisture to optimize water uptake

[Press-News.org] Long-term poverty but not family instability affects children's cognitive development
Family hardship, family instability and cognitive development