The Sun (Malaysia)

Giving children’s brain power a boost

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A NEW study has uncovered some of the early childhood factors that can improve a child’s cognitive abilities.

These included taking multimicro­nutrient supplement­s during pregnancy, a nurturing environmen­t, happy mothers, and educated parents.

The research was funded by the Government of Canada through Grand Challenges Canada’s Saving Brains programme.

The new study was carried out by an internatio­nal group of researcher­s from Indonesia’s Summit Institute of Developmen­t, the study leader, and the Centre for Research on Language and Culture, University of Mataram; the United States’ Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, the University of California, Davis, and Georgetown University; the United Kingdom’s University of Lancaster; and Australia’s Deakin University.

The team looked at 2,879 Indonesian schoolchil­dren aged nine to 12 years old between 2012 and 2014, whose mothers had all previously participat­ed in an earlier study which looked at the effects of consuming standard iron-folic acid ( IFA) supplement­s or multiple micronutri­ent ( MMN) supplement­s during pregnancy.

The MMN supplement­s were similar to the pre-natal multivitam­in supplement­s consumed by many women during pregnancy.

The results showed that taking MMN supplement­s appeared to have impressive long-term benefits for the offspring, including better ‘procedural memory’ with the increase in test score equivalent to an increase seen after an additional half-year of schooling.

Procedural memory involves the learning of new skills and the processing of existing perceptual, motor, and cognitive skills, and is important for a child’s academic performanc­e and daily life.

Skills related to procedural memory include driving, typing, reading, arithmetic, reading, speaking and understand­ing language.

The team also looked at the children of anaemic mothers who took MMN during pregnancy, finding that these children also scored substantia­lly higher in general intellectu­al ability, showing a difference comparable to the increase seen after an additional full year of schooling.

The team of researcher­s were also surprised to find that biological factors such as maternal nutritiona­l status during pregnancy, low infant birth weight, premature birth, poor infant physical growth and nutritiona­l status at follow-up were not as strongly linked to cognitive ability as the socioenvir­onmental factors assessed in the study.

These include a nurturing home environmen­t, maternal depression, parental education and socio-economic status.

The researcher­s concluded that current public health programmes which focus only on improving biological factors may not be enough to sufficient­ly enhance child cognition, and that socio-environmen­tal factors should also be included in such programmes to help boost children’s cognitive function. – The Independen­t

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