Firstborn Girl May Face Weight Issues: Study

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Firstborn Girl May Face Weight Issues: Study
Firstborn women are more likely to be obese as adults than their second-born sisters, finds the largest study of its kind in women. "Our study corroborates other studies on men, as we showed that firstborn women have greater Body Mass Index (BMI) and are more likely to be overweight or obese than their second born sisters," explained Wayne Cutfield and his colleagues from the University of Auckland, New Zealand.
The study published online in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health, concluded that the steady reduction in family size may be a contributing factor to the observed increase in adult body mass index (BMI) worldwide, not only among men, but also among women.Research studied 13,406 sister pairs and their information was obtained from antenatal clinic records from the Swedish National Birth Register over 20 years (1991-2009). Researchers found that firstborns were nearly 30 percent more likely to be overweight and 40 percent more likely to be obese than their younger siblings were. They were also marginally taller. The number of children in a family was not associated with BMI or the odds of being overweight/obese. But having more siblings was associated with shorter height and lower odds of being tall, possibly attributable to the 'resource dilution hypothesis' which holds that there's less to go around as a family grows in size, the researchers said.
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