Sibling rivalry between twins in utero and childhood: Evidence from birthweight and survival of 95 919 twin pairs in 72 low‐ and middle‐income countries

Author:

Alemu Robel12ORCID,Masters William A.3ORCID,Finaret Amelia B.45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Anderson School of Management University of California Los Angeles Los Angeles California USA

2. Program in Medical and Population Genetics Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard Cambridge Massachusetts USA

3. Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy Tufts University Medford Massachusetts USA

4. Global Academy of Agriculture and Food Systems University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

5. Department of Global Health Allegheny College Meadville Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThis study explores the magnitude and timing of sex and gender disparities in child development by describing differences in health outcomes for male and female siblings, comparing twins to control for all aspects of life circumstances other than sex and gender.MethodsWe construct a repeat cross‐sectional dataset of 191 838 twins among 1.7 million births recorded in 214 nationally representative household surveys for 72 countries between 1990 and 2016. To test for biological or social mechanisms that might favor the health of male or female infants, we describe differences in birthweights, attained heights, weights, and survival to distinguish gestational health from care practices after each child is born.ResultsWe find that male fetuses grow at the expense of their co‐twin, significantly reducing their sibling's birthweight and survival probabilities, but only if the other fetus is male. Female fetuses are born significantly heavier when they share the uterus with a male co‐twin and have no significant difference in survival probability whether they happen to draw a male or a female co‐twin. These findings demonstrate that sex‐specific sibling rivalry and male frailty begin in utero, prior to gender bias after birth that typically favors male children.ConclusionsSex differences in child health may have competing effects with gender bias that occurs during childhood. Worse health outcomes for males with a male co‐twin could be linked to hormone levels or male frailty, and could lead to underestimates of the effect sizes of later gender bias against girls. Gender bias favoring surviving male children may explain the lack of differences in height and weight observed for twins with either male or female co‐twins.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Anthropology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Anatomy

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