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Data relating to "Associations between Maternal Iron Supplementation in Pregnancy and Offspring Growth and Cardiometabolic Risk Outcomes in Infancy and Childhood"


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Dataset

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Description

Dataset used for the paper " Associations between Maternal Iron Supplementation in Pregnancy and Offspring Growth and Cardiometabolic Risk Outcomes in Infancy and Childhood" published in Plos ONE and containing data from the Cambridge Baby Growth Study. Uncompressed Microsoft 2013 (.xlsx) file (986 rows including header; 79 columns for standard association analysis) containing data relevant to the publication collected as part of the Cambridge Baby Growth Study (data collection 2001-2009). All the study participants were recruited from pregnancy clinics at the Rosie Maternity Hospital, Cambridge (2001-2009) around week 12 of pregnancy (at booking clinics). Maternal iron, folic acid and multiple micronutrient supplementation in pregnancy and any anaemia in pregnancy were self-reported and collected as part of pregnancy questionnaires. Offspring birth weight and gestational age at birth were collected from hospital notes. All other assessments of the infant’s size and adiposity at birth (including the measurement of skinfold thicknesses at 4 difference sites) and at 3, 12 and 24 months of age were made by trained paediatric research nurses. A subset of participants was assessed in mid-childhood (around age 9.5 years) by the same research nurses. Assessments included weight, height, head circumference, skinfold thicknesses at the same sites as assessed in infancy, blood pressure and pulse, and (short) 30 minute oral glucose tolerance tests. Missing data are presented as empty cells. For further information about the study please contact Dr. Clive Petry (email: cjp1002@cam.ac.uk; Department of Paediatrics, Box 116, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, Hills Road, Cambridge CB2 0QQ, U.K.).

Version

Software / Usage instructions

Microsoft Excel 365

Keywords

adiposity, blood pressure, cardiometabolic health, development

Publisher

Sponsorship
National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) (unknown)
Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (CUH) (146281)
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