ESPE Abstracts (2016) 86 P-P2-522

ESPE2016 Poster Presentations Fat Metabolism and Obesity P2 (56 abstracts)

The Effect of Demographic and Lifestyle Factors on One-year BMI Increments in 776 Norwegian Children Aged 6–15 Years

Hege Kristiansen a, , Mathieu Roelants c , Robert Bjerknes b & Pétur Júlíusson b,


aDepartment of Paediatrics, District General Hospital of Førde, Førde, Norway; bDepartment of Clinical Science, Section for Paediatrics, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway; cEnvironment and Health, Department of Public Health and Primary Care, KU Leuven-University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium; dDepartment of Paediatrics, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway


Background: There is limited information on the ability of demographic or lifestyle factors to predict short term changes in weight status during childhood.

Objective and hypotheses: To study the effect of parental (educational level, BMI status and perception of child’s weight status) and childhood factors (eating habits, sedentary behaviour and physical activity), on 1-year BMI increments by the use of BMI, BMI SDS and BMI SDS conditional gain.

Method: With data from the Bergen Growth Study the relations between demographic and lifestyle factors and one-year BMI increments were explored. Each of the three BMI measures (changes in BMI and BMI SDS, and BMI conditional gain) was analysed separately as a dependent variable with linear regression models. Adjusted regression models were estimated for each BMI measure separately, including all the statistically significant variables from the unadjusted models.

Results: In the unadjusted models, 1-year changes in BMI were correlated to maternal BMI, parental perception, irregular meals and screen time. Changes in BMI SDS were only correlated to irregular meals and screen time. Changes in BMI SDS conditional gain were correlated to maternal BMI, parental perception and irregular meals. In the fully adjusted model raw BMI increments were correlated to parental perception, irregular meals and screen time, BMI SDS increments to irregular meals and BMI SDS conditional gain to parental perception and irregular meals.

Conclusion: Parental perception of child’s weight status, irregular meals and screen time can predict higher 1-year BMI increments. BMI SDS conditional gain adjusts for regression towards the mean, and might therefore be the preferred measure.

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