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Neurodevelopmental milestones and associated behaviours are similar among healthy children across diverse geographical locations

Authors :
Villar, José
Fernandes, Michelle
Purwar, Manorama
Staines-Urias, Eleonora
Di Nicola, Paola
Cheikh Ismail, Leila
Ochieng, Roseline
Barros, Fernando
Albernaz, Elaine
Victora, Cesar
Kunnawar, Naina
Temple, Sophie
Giuliani, Francesca
Sandells, Tamsin
Carvalho, Maria
Ohuma, Eric
Jaffer, Yasmin
Noble, Alison
Gravett, Michael
Pang, Ruyan
Lambert, Ann
Bertino, Enrico
Papageorghiou, Aris
Garza, Cutberto
Stein, Alan
Bhutta, Zulfiqar
Kennedy, Stephen
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-10 (2019), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2019.

Abstract

It is unclear whether early child development is, like skeletal growth, similar across diverse regions with adequate health and nutrition. We prospectively assessed 1307 healthy, well-nourished 2-year-old children of educated mothers, enrolled in early pregnancy from urban areas without major socioeconomic or environmental constraints, in Brazil, India, Italy, Kenya and UK. We used a specially developed psychometric tool, WHO motor milestones and visual tests. Similarities across sites were measured using variance components analysis and standardised site differences (SSD). In 14 of the 16 domains, the percentage of total variance explained by between-site differences ranged from 1.3% (cognitive score) to 9.2% (behaviour score). Of the 80 SSD comparisons, only six were >±0.50 units of the pooled SD for the corresponding item. The sequence and timing of attainment of neurodevelopmental milestones and associated behaviours in early childhood are, therefore, likely innate and universal, as long as nutritional and health needs are met.<br />It is unclear whether the sequence and timing of early life neurodevelopment varies across human populations, excluding the effects of disease or malnutrition. Here, the authors show that children of healthy, urban, educated mothers show very similar development across five geographically diverse populations.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....6e5972e41831c19351ef7baee09fbd9b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-07983-4