Data from two prospective population - based
British birth cohort studies, the 1958 National Child Development Study35 (NCDS) and the 1970 British Cohort Study36 (BCS), are combined.
IQ in childhood and the metabolic syndrome in middle age: extended follow - up of the 1946
British Birth Cohort Study
Adverse events in childhood and chronic widespread pain in adult life: results from the 1958
British Birth Cohort Study
Birth weight, childhood socioeconomic environment, and cognitive development in the 1958
British birth cohort study
Not exact matches
British Cohort Study interviewer instructions for sweep 2 in 1975 (cohort child at five years) state that «if the [birth] father is divorced, separated or has «deserted» the mother, he is not considered as a «father figure» even if visiting the child daily» (see page 68 of our full re
Cohort Study interviewer instructions for sweep 2 in 1975 (
cohort child at five years) state that «if the [birth] father is divorced, separated or has «deserted» the mother, he is not considered as a «father figure» even if visiting the child daily» (see page 68 of our full re
cohort child at five years) state that «if the [
birth] father is divorced, separated or has «deserted» the mother, he is not considered as a «father figure» even if visiting the child daily» (see page 68 of our full report)!
Childhood deprivation, health and development: associations with adult health in the 1958 and 1970
British prospective
birth cohort studies
To apply this design, we turned to a second sample, the Environmental - Risk Longitudinal Twin
Study (E-Risk), where we have been tracking a
birth cohort of
British twins since their
birth in 1994 to 1995 with 96 % retention (SI Appendix).
The authors analyzed data from 16,653 individuals involved in two separate
birth cohort studies: the 1970
British... Read more →
Birth weight and cognitive function in the British 1946 birth cohort: longitudinal population based
Birth weight and cognitive function in the
British 1946
birth cohort: longitudinal population based
birth cohort: longitudinal population based
study
The
study sample comprised 1,134 women from the 1946
British birth cohort.
The MRC National Survey of Health and Development (NSHD), the
British 1946
birth cohort study, provides prospective measures of social class origin and attainment, childhood cognitive ability and educational attainment, and parenting practices and has measured cognitive ability in their first offspring.