Low Birth Weight Affects
IQ Into Teen Years
The effects of low birth weight on academic
achievement persist well into adolescence, even among young people
from relatively affluent backgrounds, a new study shows.
Low birth-weight children scored
3 to 5 points below normal birth-weight children on standardized
academic achievement tests at ages 11 and 17, Dr. Naomi Breslau
and colleagues from Michigan State University in East Lansing
found.
Children's IQ test score at age
6 predicted later scores, for the most part, the team reports
in the medical journal Pediatrics.
While the effects of low birth
weight on intelligence are modest, they are real, and doctors
should consider recommending early interventions and enrichment
to help overcome them, Breslau stated.
"It's very important that people
don't think things simply go away," she said.
Breslau and her colleagues followed
394 children from inner-city Detroit and 379 children from the
city's more affluent suburbs. About half of the children in each
group weighed less than 2500 grams at birth.
The study found "stark gaps in
achievement scores" between the urban and suburban groups, the
researchers note, while differences within both groups between
low birth-weight and normal birth-weight children were roughly
the same.
At age 17, low birth-weight children
were 50 percent more likely than normal birth-weight children
to score below the mean of 100 on reading tests and 60 percent
more likely to score below average on math tests.
Breslau noted that the study design
allowed her team to isolate the effects of low birth weight from
those of a less-advantaged environment on academic achievement.
While preschool enrichment programs
designed to boost general intelligence will likely be enough to
help LBW children from affluent backgrounds, Breslau said, they
are not sufficient to address academic problems many poorer low
birth-weight children face.
SOURCE: Pediatrics, October 2004.
Reference
Source 89
October 14, 2004
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