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BMJ 2005;331 (22 October), doi:10.1136/bmj.331.7522.0
Heavy infants and those who grow rapidly are at increased risk of being obese later in life. In a systematic review, Baird and colleagues (p 929) found 22 cohort studies and two case-control studies that assessed the association between infant size or growth and subsequent obesity. Obese infants were up to nine times more likely than non-obese infants to become obese adults, and infants who grew rapidly were up to five times more likely to become obese adults compared with other infants. Strategies for preventing obesity may need to address factors during or before infancy, say the authors.
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Credit: CAMILLE TOKERUD/GETTY
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