International differences in gradients in early childhood overweight and obesity: the role of maternal employment and formal childcare attendance

Author:

Panico Lidia12ORCID,Boinet Cesarine3,Akabayashi Hideo4,de la Rie Sanneke5,Kwon Sarah Jiyoon6ORCID,Kameyama Yuriko4,Keizer Renske5,Nozaki Kayo7,Perinetti Casoni Valentina8,Volodina Anna910,Waldfogel Jane11,Weinert Sabine9,Washbrook Elizabeth8

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Research on Social Inequalities (CRIS), Sciences Po , Paris, France

2. Institut National d'Etudes Démographiques , Aubervilliers, France

3. University of Strathclyde , Glasgow, UK

4. Faculty of Economics, Keio University , Minato City, Japan

5. Department of Public Administration and Sociology, Erasmus University Rotterdam , Rotterdam, The Netherlands

6. Crown Family School of Social Work, Policy, and Practice, University of Chicago , Chicago, IL, USA

7. Faculty of Economics, Osaka University of Economics , Osaka, Japan

8. School of Education, University of Bristol , Bristol, UK

9. University of Bamberg , Bamberg, Germany

10. Institute for Educational Quality Improvement, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin , Berlin, Germany

11. Columbia University School of Social Work , New York, NY, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background There are significant cross-country differences in socio-economic gradients in later childhood and adulthood overweight/obesity; few studies assess whether this cross-national variation is evident from early childhood. Furthermore, the role of childcare in explaining overweight/obesity gradients might vary across countries, given differences in access, quality and heterogeneity within. Additionally, childcare is linked to parental characteristics such as maternal employment. The interplay between childcare and employment in producing early overweight/obesity gradients has received little attention, and might vary cross-nationally. Methods Using harmonized data from six high-quality, large datasets, we explore the variation in gradients in early overweight/obesity (at age 3–4 years old) by parental education across several high-income countries (USA, UK, France, the Netherlands, Germany and Japan). We then assess whether differential formal group care use attenuates some of these gradients, and whether this varies across maternal employment. Results Gradients in early childhood overweight/obesity by parental education are evident across several developed countries. Countries with higher overall prevalence of early overweight/obesity did not have the largest inequalities across education groups. The contribution of formal group care to producing these gradients varied across countries and across maternal employment status. Conclusion Early childhood inequalities in overweight/obesity are pervasive across developed countries, as noted for older children and adults. However, mechanisms producing these gradients vary across national contexts. Our study shows that, given the right context, quality childcare and maternal employment can successfully support healthy weight trajectories and not contribute (or even reduce) social inequalities in early overweight/obesity.

Funder

Development of Inequalities in Child Educational Achievement

Open Research Area

Economic and Social Research Council

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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