Association of Social, Paternal and Maternal Factors with Intellectual Disability : A Case Control Study
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Published:2024-03-25
Issue:1
Volume:30
Page:
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ISSN:2079-0694
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Container-title:Annals of King Edward Medical University
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language:
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Short-container-title:Annals KEMU
Author:
Muhammad Ashraf Chaudhry ,Zainab Omer ,Anwar Hamna,Shireen Rafeeq ,Umar Ahmed Siddiqui ,Amin Bushra
Abstract
Background: Pakistan has a high number of intellectually disabled people, who cannot learn and function at expected levels. The scarce research done here shows consanguinity, malnutrition, low socio-economic status, and maternal illiteracy to be risk factors.
Objectives: To identify risk factors for Intellectual Disability in Pakistani children and to recommend preventive measures for parents and policymakers.
Methods: This was a case-control study conducted in Lahore, Pakistan from February to May 2022. The total sample size was 378 with 126 cases and 252 controls (ratio 1:2), aged 2-19 years. Parents were interviewed and data was entered into a structured questionnaire. Data was entered in SPSS 26 and analyzed.
Results: Significant differences between cases and controls were observed for consanguinity (p=0.001), educational level (p=0.001), socioeconomic status of parents (p=0.001), and for paternal genetic and neurological factors (p=0.001). Multiple logistic regression analysis showed that a history of consanguinity (p=0.001) and low maternal education (p=0.001) had a significant effect on ID. Low socioeconomic status showed no significant association with ID, nor did breastfeeding. Adjusted Odds Ratio (OR) showed that the risk of developing ID increases by a factor of 7.8 and 4.1 respectively for history of consanguinity and low maternal education.
Conclusions: Consanguinity emerged as a major risk factor for intellectual disability. This should be discouraged by pre-marital counseling and health education.
Publisher
Annals of King Edward Medical University