1. Extending the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Cohort through 2030: Rationale and study protocol.
- Author
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Blackwell, Courtney, Cella, David, Adair, Linda, Cordero, José, Das, Suman, Elliott, Amy, Hipwell, Alison, Jacobson, Lisa, Neiderhiser, Jenae, Stanford, Joseph, Wright, Rosalind, and Gershon, Richard
- Subjects
Humans ,Female ,Child Health ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Pregnancy ,Longitudinal Studies ,Environmental Exposure ,Infant ,Adolescent ,United States ,Male ,Cohort Studies ,Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects ,Infant ,Newborn ,Young Adult ,Research Design ,Adult - Abstract
Early life environmental exposures, even those experienced before conception, can shape health and disease trajectories across the lifespan. Optimizing the detection of the constellation of exposure effects on a broad range of child health outcomes across development requires considerable sample size, transdisciplinary expertise, and developmentally sensitive and dimensional measurement. To address this, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Cohort Study is an observational longitudinal pediatric cohort study. In the first phase from 2016-2023, the ECHO Program built a robust platform for investigating prenatal and early life environmental exposures on child health outcomes. Now, the ECHO Program is extending longitudinal follow-up of existing ECHO participants
- Published
- 2024