The Guardian Australia

Children of mothers who eat junk food more likely to be overweight – study

- Andrew Gregory Health editor

Children of mothers who consume ultra-processed foods such as ready meals, sugary cereals and biscuits are more likely to grow up overweight or obese, a study suggests.

The link between a mother’s diet and her child’s obesity risk is independen­t of other lifestyle risk factors, including the child’s own consumptio­n of ultra-processed food, according to the research. The findings are published in the BMJ.

Researcher­s at Massachuse­tts general hospital and Harvard medical school cautioned that further work is needed to confirm these findings – and to understand the factors that may be responsibl­e.

But they say mothers may benefit from limiting their intake of ultra-processed foods, that dietary guidelines should be refined, and financial and social barriers removed to improve nutrition for women of child-bearing age and reduce child obesity.

“Maternal consumptio­n of ultraproce­ssed food during the child rearing period was associated with an increased risk of overweight or obesity in offspring, independen­t of maternal and offspring lifestyle risk factors,” the researcher­s wrote.

“Further study is needed to confirm these findings and to understand the underlying biological mechanisms and environmen­tal determinan­ts.

“These data support the importance of refining dietary recommenda­tions and the developmen­t of programs to improve nutrition for women of reproducti­ve age to promote offspring health.”

According to the World Health Organizati­on, 39 million children were overweight or obese in 2020, raising the risk of heart disease, diabetes, cancers and early death.

Ultra-processed foods, such as packaged baked goods and snacks, fizzy drinks and sugary cereals, are commonly found in modern western-style diets and are associated with weight gain in adults. But until now it has been unclear if there is a link between a mother’s consumptio­n of ultra-processed foods and her offspring’s body weight.

The researcher­s drew on data for 19,958 children born to 14,553 mothers in the US.

A range of other potentiall­y influentia­l factors, known to be strongly correlated with child obesity, were also taken into account. These included the mother’s weight (BMI), physical activity, smoking, living status (with partner or not) and partner’s education, as well as the child’s ultra-processed food consumptio­n, physical activity, and sedentary time.

The results showed that a mother’s ultra-processed food consumptio­n was associated with an increased risk of her offspring being overweight or obese. For example, a 26% higher risk was seen in the group with the highest maternal ultra-processed food consumptio­n compared with the lowest consumptio­n group.

This was an observatio­nal study, so cannot establish cause and the researcher­s acknowledg­ed several limitation­s of their work. However, the study used data from large ongoing studies with detailed dietary assessment­s over a relatively long period, and analysis produced consistent associatio­ns, suggesting that the results are robust.

They said it was not immediatel­y clear what may be behind the link between a mother’s consumptio­n of ultraproce­ssed food and child obesity, and called for further investigat­ion.

“Although the underlying pathways of our findings have not yet been fully elucidated and remain beyond the scope of this investigat­ion, maternal diet during child-rearing is likely to shape offspring’s diet and lifestyle choices, which subsequent­ly exert a profound impact on their risk of overweight or obesity,” they wrote.

“Our results showed that the associatio­n between maternal ultraproce­ssed food intake during the child rearing period and offspring risk of overweight or obesity was independen­t of offspring’s lifestyle risk factors. This finding indicates that there may be other pathways through which maternal ultra-processed food intake may influence childhood overweight risk; for example, long-term in utero imprinting and the presence of uncharacte­rised gene by environmen­t factors.”

 ?? Photograph: goodmoment­s/Getty Images/iStockphot­o ?? The researcher­s say they can’t yet explain the link between mothers eating ultra-processed food and their children being at higher risk of being overweight.
Photograph: goodmoment­s/Getty Images/iStockphot­o The researcher­s say they can’t yet explain the link between mothers eating ultra-processed food and their children being at higher risk of being overweight.

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