Sentences with phrase «millennium cohort study»

The UK Millennium Cohort Study (MCS) follows a nationally - representative cohort of children born around 2001 [18].
Data Availability: All the Millennium Cohort Study datasets used in this analysis are deposited in the UK Data Archive and are available from the UK Data Service (https://discover.ukdataservice.ac.uk/series/?sn=2000031#format).
Citation: Kroll ME, Carson C, Redshaw M, Quigley MA (2016) Early Father Involvement and Subsequent Child Behaviour at Ages 3, 5 and 7 Years: Prospective Analysis of the UK Millennium Cohort Study.
We thank the families who participated in the Millennium Cohort Study.
The Millennium Cohort Study (MCS) is a UK longitudinal study of children born between September 2000 and August 2001.19 This article uses 3 waves of data collected when children were ≈ 3, 5, and 7 years old.
METHODS: We used SDQ data from 16659 families collected by the Millennium Cohort Study, which charts the development of children born throughout the United Kingdom during 2000 — 2001.
Jones EM, Ketende, SC, Sosthenes C. Millennium Cohort Study: User Guide to Analysing MCS Data Using SPSS.
Kiernan, K. (2006) «Non-resident fatherhood and child involvement: Evidence from the Millennium Cohort Study» Journal of Social Policy, 35:651 - 669.
Recent findings from the Millennium Cohort Study indicated that some 31 % of never resident fathers had no contact with the child at age nine months (Kiernan, 2006:664).
Cross-Domain Symptom Development Typologies and Their Antecedents: Results From the UK Millennium Cohort Study.
Emerson et al. [38 • •], for example, conducted a secondary analysis of the Millennium Cohort Study in the UK and found that after matching on socioeconomic variables, probable psychiatric disorder was no more likely to be found among fathers of children with early cognitive delay, and the strength of this association for mothers was substantially diminished.
Maternal employment and child socio - emotional behaviour in the UK: longitudinal evidence from the UK Millennium Cohort Study
Findings from the Millennium Cohort Study
We compared the findings in this section with a recent study using data from the Millennium Cohort Study (MCS), referred to in Chapter 1 (Hobcraft and Kiernan 2010).
Based on the Millennium Cohort Study of 10,000 mothers in the UK who were either married or cohabiting as a couple when their child was nine months old, we looked at how often these couples went out together at that time, and compared it to whether they were still together as a couple just over 10 years later.
Our GUS finding for family socio - economic disadvantage (as indicated here by lower parental education) ties in with the negative effect of low family socio - economic status on the quality of both mothers» and fathers» relations with three year - old children in another large birth cohort, the UK Millennium Cohort Study (Malmberg & Flouri, 2011).
For example, recent research of Growing Up in Scotland (GUS), the Millennium Cohort Study (MCS) and other sources has shown that changes to parental relationships can impact on child behaviour (Bradshaw and Tipping, 2010; Keirnan and Mensah, 2010) and that parents» transitions into and out of employment can impact on both family income and parent - child interaction (Millar and Ridge, 2008; McQuaid et al., 2010).
Predictive factors from age 3 and infancy for poor child outcomes at age 5 relating to children's development, behaviour and health: evidence from the Millennium Cohort Study.
However, research using the UK Millennium Cohort Study did not find that the quality of mothers» and fathers» relationships with younger children (aged three) varied according to a score of adverse family events (Malmberg et al., 2011).
Our apparently contradictory GUS finding may reflect measurement of events over a longer time period, and their impact on children's feelings, rather than on parenting behaviour - especially as our measures of parent - child relationships (unlike those in the UK Millennium Cohort Study) are child - reported, and involve older children.
Predictive factors from age 3 and infancy for poor child outcomes at age 5 relating to children's development, behaviour and health: evidence from the Millennium Cohort Study, York University.
We have constructed measures of «warmth» and «conflict» to use in this research, adopting methodology used by Hobcraft and Kiernan (2010) for analysing Pianta questions in the Millennium Cohort Study.
«Early Father Involvement and Subsequent Child Behaviour at Ages 3, 5 and 7 Years: Prospective Analysis of the UK Millennium Cohort Study
A decomposition methodology examined the contribution from different sources in explaining the SES gradient in early cognitive outcomes.34 Similar to the methodology used in the UK Millennium Cohort Study, we focus on the quintile 1 — quintile 5 (Q1 — Q5) and quintile 1 — quintile 3 (Q1 — Q3) gaps and calculate the percentile points and the percentage of the raw gaps explained by each candidate explanatory factor and each domain of factors.2 This was done by taking the product of the mean gap in each explanatory factor (mean difference between Q1 — Q5 and Q1 — Q3) by the β coefficients from linear regression models that predict reading and math ability from SES and all candidate explanatory factors.
In the UK Millennium Cohort study, parenting, home learning, and family interaction factors explained 16 % to 17 % of the SES gradients in cognitive ability by age 5 and preschool and early child care 2 % to 3 %.2 Perhaps owing to different or more comprehensive measures, health, home environment, and early education factors had a larger impact in ECLS - B.
A recent investigation from the UK Millennium Cohort Study found that a variety of parenting, home learning, and early education factors explained a small portion of the socioeconomic status (SES) gradients in children's cognitive ability by age 5.2 Although some US studies have examined selected factors at different stages of childhood, 24 — 27 few have had comprehensive data to examine the socioeconomic distribution of a wide variety of risk and protective factors across early childhood and their role as potential independent mediators of the SES gradients in cognitive ability at kindergarten entry.
15 995 two - to three - year - old children born between September 2000 and January 2002 in the UK (Millennium Cohort Study: MCS) and children born between March 2003 and February 2004 in Australia (Longitudinal Study of Australian Children: LSAC).
Findings from the UK Millennium Cohort Study
The social and economic circumstances of mixed ethnicity children in the UK: findings from the Millennium Cohort Study.
The study draws on data collected for the Millennium Cohort Study (MCS), a survey of 18 819 babies born between September 2000 and January 2002 into 18 553 families living in the UK.42 The first sweep of the MCS was carried out during 2001 and 2002 when most babies were 9 months old.
Design and participants Data were drawn from the UK Millennium Cohort Study, a nationally representative prospective cohort of babies born in 2000 — 2002.
Socioeconomic inequalities in overweight in the Millennium Cohort Study by maternal academic attainment at ages 3, 5, 7 and 11 (n = 14 872; 46 094 observations)
Maternal employment and early childhood overweight: findings from the UK Millennium Cohort study
The Millennium Cohort Study Child Health group.
Using 2008 data for almost 5,000 pupils from the Millennium Cohort Study, it demonstrates biases in teachers» average ratings of sample pupils» reading and maths «ability and attainment» which correspond to every one of these key characteristics.
In - School Ability Grouping and the Month of Birth Effect: Preliminary Evidence from the Millennium Cohort Study
The study analysed information on over 6,400 children in England taking part in the Millennium Cohort Study, which examined data on children born in 2000 - 01 from birth.
The research is reported in a book just published from the Millennium Cohort Study of nearly 15,000 children in the United Kingdom.
The team, which also included academics from Essex University, York University and University College London, looked at a group of 9,500 white children born in 2000 and 2001, included in a project called the Millennium Cohort Study.
Researchers Professor Melinda Mills and doctoral student Anna Barbuscia, from the University of Oxford's Department of Sociology and Nuffield College, used data from the UK Millennium Cohort Study, a nationally representative group of 18,552 families.
The Millennium Cohort Study (MCS) will be conducting an age 14 survey after receiving funding of # 3.5 million from the Economic and Social Research Council.
A randomised trial in Brazil that compared a hospital based protocol (similar to the baby friendly hospital initiative) with another incorporating intensive home visits, however, found that while the protocol achieved high rates of exclusive breast feeding in hospital, the rates fell rapidly thereafter.27 These findings were confirmed in the UK by the millennium cohort study, 5 and the authors recommended that the baby friendly hospital initiative as a strategy for promotion of breast feeding should be reassessed and that other strategies are required to support mothers in the UK to breast feed for the recommended duration.5 27 Although combined antenatal education and postnatal support is ideal, this may be limited by economic or time resources.
The initiative was introduced to the United Kingdom in 1993, but, although improvements have been reported, 3 rates of breast feeding in the UK are still among the lowest in the world.4 5 Recent reports from the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) urge NHS units to become baby friendly to improve rates of breast feeding and save money.4 6 Data from the millennium cohort study, however, show that though participating maternity units in the UK increased rates of initiation of breastfeeding, duration did not increase.5 Other strategies are therefore required to support mothers in the UK to breast feed for the recommended time.
The UK Millennium Cohort Study estimated that exclusive and sustained breastfeeding could prevent 53 % and 27 % of hospitalizations each month due to diarrhoeal and lower respiratory tract infections while partial breastfeeding could prevent 31 % and 25 % each month, respectively.
[21] Quigley MA, Kelly YJ, Sacker A. Breastfeeding and hospitalization for diarrheal and respiratory infection in the United Kingdom Millennium Cohort Study.
The study from Trinity's Department of Public Health and Primary Care, which included over 17,500 women from the UK Millennium Cohort Study and 10,500 women from the «Growing Up in Ireland» study found:
The Millennium Cohort Study was approved by the London Multi Centre Research Ethics Committee.
We would like to thank all the Millennium Cohort Study families for their cooperation, and Professor Heather Joshi and the Millennium Cohort Study team at the Centre for Longitudinal Studies, Institute of Education, University of London.
Members of the Millennium Cohort Study Child Health Group: Helen Bedford, Neville Butler, Tim Cole, Catherine Peckham, Lamiya Samad and Suzanne Walton, all at Centre for Paediatric Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Institute of Child Health, 30 Guilford Street, London, WC1N 1EH, UK.
Members of the Millennium Cohort Study Child Health Group contributed to the paper through analysis and construction of explanatory variables and commented on data interpretation and early drafts of the manuscript.
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