Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

A baby’s growth is 90% due to nurture

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Now here’s a reversal of previous thinking: all children born to healthy parents in clean environmen­ts develop at approximat­ely the same rate, with genes accounting for as little as 10% of their developmen­t.

The nature versus nurture debate has raged for decades, so researcher­s at the University of Oxford examined data from about 1,000 children to try and settle the argument.

Professor Stephen Kennedy, the co-director of the Oxford Maternal and Perinatal Health Institute, said: “At every single stage we’ve shown that healthy mothers have healthy babies and that healthy babies all grow at exactly the same rate. It doesn’t matter where you are living, it doesn’t matter what the colour of your skin is, it doesn’t matter what your race and ethnicity is.”

Three cheers for this clarificat­ion. I’ve long believed how a child is raised is the most powerful factor in their intellectu­al developmen­t. The Intergrowt­h-21st Project tracked nearly 60,000 mothers and babies in the womb, then followed more than 1,300 to age two, taking seven years to complete the study.

Mothers who were in good health and living in clean urban areas were selected from the UK, Italy, Kenya, India and Brazil for the final 1,300.

Results showed that as well as the speed of physical growth being approximat­ely equal regardless of race, so was babies’ behaviour and brain developmen­t. Conditions that affected brain developmen­t were all environmen­tal – the baby’s living conditions, the food they ate and the education they were given.

Oxford’s Prof Kennedy said: “There’s still a substantia­l body of opinion out there in both the scientific and lay communitie­s who genuinely believe that intelligen­ce is predominan­tly determined by genes and the environmen­t that you’re living in, and that your parents and grandparen­ts were living in, and their nutritiona­l and health status are not relevant. That’s clearly not the case.”

Prof Kennedy and Professor Jose Villar, who co-authored the Intergrowt­h-21st project, hope the World Health Organisati­on will adopt its data.

University attendance is one further measure of intelligen­ce in adolescent­s and in the UK white people have the lowest proportion of state-educated 18-year-olds going to university (less than one in three), according to 2017 data. Asian teenagers (45.8%) and Chinese young people (63%) are most likely to attend higher education, alongside 40.4% of black adolescent­s.

The rate among mixed race 18-yearolds is 34%. These rates are, in the most part, embedded in family, culture and community – so that’s an environmen­tal cause, not genetic.

 ??  ?? How a child is raised is most powerful factor
How a child is raised is most powerful factor

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