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Article

Sex differences in child and adolescent physical morbidity: cohort study

Details

Citation

Sweeting H, Whitley E, Teyhan A & Hunt K (2017) Sex differences in child and adolescent physical morbidity: cohort study. BMJ Paediatrics Open, 1 (1), Art. No.: e000191. http://bmjpaedsopen.bmj.com/content/1/1/e000191; https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjpo-2017-000191

Abstract
Background Evidence on sex differences in physical morbidity in childhood and adolescence is based largely on studies employing single/few physical morbidity measures and different informants. We describe sex differences in a wide range of parent/carer-reported physical morbidity measures between ages 4 and 13 years to determine evidence for a generalised pattern of an emerging/increasing female ¡®excess¡¯. Methods Parents/carers (approximately 90% mothers) of the population-based UK ALSPAC cohort provided data on general health, physical conditions/symptoms and infections in their child approximately annually between ages 4 and 13. Logistic regression analyses determined the odds of each morbidity measure being reported in respect of females (vs males) at each age and the sex-by-age interaction, to investigate any changing sex difference with age. Results Six measures (general health past year/month, high temperature, rash, eye and ear infections) demonstrated an emerging female ¡®excess¡¯, and six (earache, stomach-ache, headache, lice/scabies, cold sores, urinary infections) an increasing female ¡®excess¡¯; one (breathlessness) showed a disappearing male ¡®excess¡¯. Just two showed either an emerging or increasing male ¡®excess¡¯. Most changes were evident during childhood (prepuberty). Six measures showed consistent female ¡®excesses¡¯ and four consistent male ¡®excesses¡¯. Few measures showed no sex differences throughout this period of childhood/early adolescence. Conclusion Sex differences are evident for a wide range of parent-reported physical morbidity measures in childhood and early adolescence. Far more measures showed an emerging/increasing female ¡®excess¡¯ than an emerging/increasing male ¡®excess¡¯. Further studies are required to examine whether patterns differ across sociodemographic/cultural groups, and to explain this generalised pattern.

Journal
BMJ Paediatrics Open: Volume 1, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Funders and
Publication date31/12/2017
Publication date online29/12/2017
Date accepted by journal27/11/2017
URL
PublisherBMJ Specialist Journals
Publisher URL
ISSN2399-9772
eISSN2399-9772

People (1)

Professor Kate Hunt

Professor Kate Hunt

Professor, Institute for Social Marketing

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