clive osmond

clive osmond

University of Southampton

H-index: 148

Europe-United Kingdom

About clive osmond

clive osmond, With an exceptional h-index of 148 and a recent h-index of 71 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Southampton, specializes in the field of Statistics, Developmental Origins of Health and Disease, Epidemiology.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Worldwide trends in underweight and obesity from 1990 to 2022: a pooled analysis of 3663 population-representative studies with 222 million children, adolescents, and adults

Programming of cardiac metabolism by miR-15b-5p, a miRNA released in cardiac extracellular vesicles following ischemia-reperfusion injury

Peri-conceptional diet patterns and the risk of gestational diabetes mellitus in South Indian women

Comparison of weight for height and BMI for age for estimating overnutrition burden in under-five populations with high stunting prevalence

Diminishing benefits of urban living for growth and development of school-aged children and adolescents in the 21st century

Longitudinal Growth and Undernutrition Burden Among Term Low Birth Weight Newborns Reared in Adverse Socioeconomic Conditions in Delhi

The long-term consequences of early life exposure to tsunami and conflict on adolescents in Sri Lanka

Growth in Infancy and Childhood and Age at Menarche in Five Low-or Middle-Income Countries: Consortium of Health Orientated Research in Transitional Societies (COHORTS)

clive osmond Information

University

University of Southampton

Position

___

Citations(all)

121523

Citations(since 2020)

39953

Cited By

97477

hIndex(all)

148

hIndex(since 2020)

71

i10Index(all)

454

i10Index(since 2020)

324

Email

University Profile Page

University of Southampton

clive osmond Skills & Research Interests

Statistics

Developmental Origins of Health and Disease

Epidemiology

Top articles of clive osmond

Worldwide trends in underweight and obesity from 1990 to 2022: a pooled analysis of 3663 population-representative studies with 222 million children, adolescents, and adults

Authors

Nowell H Phelps,Rosie K Singleton,Bin Zhou,Rachel A Heap,Anu Mishra,James E Bennett,Christopher J Paciorek,Victor PF Lhoste,Rodrigo M Carrillo-Larco,Gretchen A Stevens,Andrea Rodriguez-Martinez,Honor Bixby,James Bentham,Mariachiara Di Cesare,Goodarz Danaei,Archie W Rayner,Ana Barradas-Pires,Melanie J Cowan,Stefan Savin,Leanne M Riley,Carlos A Aguilar-Salinas,Jennifer L Baker,Amina Barkat,Zulfiqar A Bhutta,Francesco Branca,Roberta B Caixeta,Sarah Cuschieri,Farshad Farzadfar,Shubash Ganapathy,Nayu Ikeda,Violeta Iotova,Andre P Kengne,Young-Ho Khang,Avula Laxmaiah,Hsien-Ho Lin,Jun Ma,Jean Claude N Mbanya,J Jaime Miranda,Rajendra Pradeepa,Fernando Rodríguez-Artalejo,Maroje Sorić,Maria Turley,Limin Wang,Karen Webster-Kerr,Julie Aarestrup,Leandra Abarca-Gómez,Mohsen Abbasi-Kangevari,Ziad A Abdeen,Shynar Abdrakhmanova,Suhaila Abdul Ghaffar,Hanan F Abdul Rahim,Zulfiya Abdurrahmonova,Niveen M Abu-Rmeileh,Jamila Abubakar Garba,Benjamin Acosta-Cazares,Ishag Adam,Marzena Adamczyk,Robert J Adams,Seth Adu-Afarwuah,Wichai Aekplakorn,Kaosar Afsana,Shoaib Afzal,Valirie N Agbor,Imelda A Agdeppa,Javad Aghazadeh-Attari,Åsa Ågren,Hassan Aguenaou,Charles Agyemang,Mohamad Hasnan Ahmad,Noor Ani Ahmad,Ali Ahmadi,Naser Ahmadi,Nastaran Ahmadi,Imran Ahmed,Soheir H Ahmed,Wolfgang Ahrens,Gulmira Aitmurzaeva,Kamel Ajlouni,Hazzaa M Al-Hazzaa,Halima Al-Hinai,Badreya Al-Lahou,Jawad A Al-Lawati,Rajaa Al-Raddadi,Deena Al Asfoor,Huda M Al Hourani,Nawal M Al Qaoud,Monira Alarouj,Fadia AlBuhairan,Shahla AlDhukair,Maryam A Aldwairji,Sylvia Alexius,Mohamed M Ali,Anna V Alieva,Abdullah Alkandari,Ala'a Alkerwi,Buthaina M Alkhatib,Kristine Allin,Shaker A Alomary,Husam F Alomirah,Arwa M Alshangiti,Mar Alvarez-Pedrerol,Eman Aly,Deepak N Amarapurkar,Pilar Amiano Etxezarreta,John Amoah,Norbert Amougou,Philippe Amouyel,Lars Bo Andersen,Sigmund A Anderssen,Odysseas Androutsos,Lars Ängquist,Ranjit Mohan Anjana,Alireza Ansari-Moghaddam,Elena Anufrieva,Hajer Aounallah-Skhiri,Joana Araújo,Inger Ariansen,Tahir Aris,Raphael E Arku,Nimmathota Arlappa,Krishna K Aryal,Nega Assefa,Thor Aspelund,Felix K Assah,Batyrbek Assembekov,Maria Cecília F Assunção,May Soe Aung,Correia Júnior Marco Aurélio de Valois,Juha Auvinen,Mária Avdičová,Shina Avi,Kishwar Azad,Ana Azevedo,Mohsen Azimi-Nezhad,Fereidoun Azizi,Bontha V Babu,Flora Bacopoulou,Maja Bæksgaard Jørgensen,Azli Baharudin,Suhad Bahijri,Izet Bajramovic,Marta Bakacs,Nagalla Balakrishna,Yulia Balanova,Mohamed Bamoshmoosh,Maciej Banach,José R Banegas,Joanna Baran,Rafał Baran,Carlo M Barbagallo

Journal

The Lancet

Published Date

2024/2/29

BackgroundUnderweight and obesity are associated with adverse health outcomes throughout the life course. We estimated the individual and combined prevalence of underweight or thinness and obesity, and their changes, from 1990 to 2022 for adults and school-aged children and adolescents in 200 countries and territories.MethodsWe used data from 3663 population-based studies with 222 million participants that measured height and weight in representative samples of the general population. We used a Bayesian hierarchical model to estimate trends in the prevalence of different BMI categories, separately for adults (age ≥20 years) and school-aged children and adolescents (age 5–19 years), from 1990 to 2022 for 200 countries and territories. For adults, we report the individual and combined prevalence of underweight (BMI <18·5 kg/m2) and obesity (BMI ≥30 kg/m2). For school-aged children and …

Programming of cardiac metabolism by miR-15b-5p, a miRNA released in cardiac extracellular vesicles following ischemia-reperfusion injury

Authors

Lucas C Pantaleão,Elena Loche,Denise S Fernandez-Twinn,Laura Dearden,Adriana Córdova-Casanova,Clive Osmond,Minna K Salonen,Eero Kajantie,Youguo Niu,Juliana de Almeida-Faria,Benjamin D Thackray,Tuija M Mikkola,Dino A Giussani,Andrew J Murray,Martin Bushell,Johan G Eriksson,Susan E Ozanne

Journal

Molecular metabolism

Published Date

2024/2/1

ObjectiveWe investigated the potential involvement of miRNAs in the developmental programming of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) by maternal obesity.MethodsSerum miRNAs were measured in individuals from the Helsinki Birth Cohort (with known maternal body mass index), and a mouse model was used to determine causative effects of maternal obesity during pregnancy and ischemia-reperfusion on offspring cardiac miRNA expression and release.ResultsmiR-15b-5p levels were increased in the sera of males born to mothers with higher BMI and in the hearts of adult mice born to obese dams. In an ex-vivo model of perfused mouse hearts, we demonstrated that cardiac tissue releases miR-15b-5p, and that some of the released miR-15b-5p was contained within small extracellular vesicles (EVs). We also demonstrated that release was higher from hearts exposed to maternal obesity following ischaemia …

Peri-conceptional diet patterns and the risk of gestational diabetes mellitus in South Indian women

Authors

Anvesha Mahendra,Sarah H Kehoe,Sarah R Crozier,Kalyanaraman Kumaran,GV Krishnaveni,Nalini Arun,Prakash Kini,Unaiza Taskeen,Krupa T Kombanda,Matthew Johnson,Clive Osmond,Caroline HD Fall

Journal

Public Health Nutrition

Published Date

2023/4

Objective To identify peri-conceptional diet patterns among women in Bangalore and examine their associations with risk of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). Design BAngalore Nutrition Gestational diabetes LifEstyle Study, started in June 2016, was a prospective observational study, in which women were recruited at 5–16 weeks’ gestation. Peri-conceptional diet was recalled at recruitment, using a validated 224-item FFQ. GDM was assessed by a 75-g oral glucose tolerance test at 24–28 weeks’ gestation, applying WHO 2013 criteria. Diet patterns were identified using principal component analysis, and diet pattern–GDM associations were examined using multivariate logistic regression, adjusting for ‘a priori’ confounders. Setting Antenatal clinics of two hospitals, Bangalore, South India. Participants Seven hundred and eighty-five pregnant women of varied socio-economic status. Results GDM …

Comparison of weight for height and BMI for age for estimating overnutrition burden in under-five populations with high stunting prevalence

Authors

L Naga Rajeev,Monika Saini,Ashish Kumar,Clive Osmond,Harshpal Singh Sachdev

Journal

Indian pediatrics

Published Date

2023/1

BackgroundOvernourished under-five children are anthropometrically classified as either being at possible risk of overweight, overweight or obese and defined so, when either weight for height or body mass index for age (BMI-for-age) are >1SD to 2SD, >2SD to 3SD and >3SD, respectively of the analogous World Health Organization standards.AimTo compare weight for height and BMI for age definitions for quantifying overnutrition burden.MethodsTheoretical consequences of ignoring age were evaluated by comparing, at varying height for age z-scores, the age- and sex-specific cutoffs of BMI that would define overnutrition with these two metrics. Overnutrition prevalence was then compared in simulated populations (short, intermediate and tall) and real-life datasets from India.ResultsIn short (−2SD) children, the BMI cutoffs with weight for height criteria were lower in comparison to BMI for age till 7–8 months, but …

Diminishing benefits of urban living for growth and development of school-aged children and adolescents in the 21st century

Authors

Anu Mishra,Bin Zhou,Andrea Rodriguez-Martinez,Honor Bixby,Rosie Singleton,Rodrigo Carrillo-Larco,Kate Sheffer,Christopher Paciorek,James Bennett,Victor Lhoste,Maria Iurilli,Mariachiara Di Cesare,James Bentham,Nowell Phelps,Marisa Sophiea,Gretchen Stevens,Goodarz Danaei,Melanie Cowan,Stefan Savin,Leanne Riley,Edward Gregg,Wichai Aekplakorn,Noor Ani Ahmad,Jennifer Baker,Adela Chirita-Emandi,Farshad Farzadfar,Günther Fink,Mirjam Heinen,Nayu Ikeda,Andre Kengne,Young-Ho Khang,Tiina Laatikainen,Avula Laxmaiah,Jun Ma,Michele Monroy-Valle,Malay Mridha,Cristina Padez,Andrew Reynolds,Maroje Sorić,Gregor Starc,James Wirth,Leandra Abarca-Gómez,Ziad Abdeen,Shynar Abdrakhmanova,Suhaila Abdul Ghaffar,Hanan Abdul Rahim,Zulfiya Abdurrahmonova,Niveen Abu-Rmeileh,Jamila Abubakar Garba,Benjamin Acosta-Cazares,Ishag Adam,Marzena Adamczyk,Robert Adams,Seth Adu-Afarwuah,Kaosar Afsana,Shoaib Afzal,Valirie Agbor,Imelda Agdeppa,Javad Aghazadeh-Attari,Hassan Aguenaou,Carlos Aguilar-Salinas,Charles Agyemang,Mohamad Hasnan Ahmad,Ali Ahmadi,Naser Ahmadi,Nastaran Ahmadi,Imran Ahmed,Soheir Ahmed,Wolfgang Ahrens,Gulmira Aitmurzaeva,Kamel Ajlouni,Hazzaa Al-Hazzaa,Badreya Al-Lahou,Rajaa Al-Raddadi,Huda Al Hourani,Nawal Al Qaoud,Monira Alarouj,Fadia Albuhairan,Shahla Aldhukair,Maryam Aldwairji,Sylvia Alexius,Mohamed Ali,Abdullah Alkandari,Ala’ Alkerwi,Buthaina Alkhatib,Kristine Allin,Mar Alvarez-Pedrerol,Eman Aly,Deepak Amarapurkar,Pilar Amiano Etxezarreta,John Amoah,Norbert Amougou,Philippe Amouyel,Lars Bo Andersen,Sigmund Anderssen,Odysseas Androutsos,Lars Ängquist,Ranjit Mohan Anjana,Alireza Ansari-Moghaddam,Elena Anufrieva,Hajer Aounallah-Skhiri,Joana Araújo,Inger Ariansen,Tahir Aris,Raphael Arku,Nimmathota Arlappa,Krishna Aryal,Nega Aseffa,Thor Aspelund,Felix Assah,Batyrbek Assembekov,Maria Cecília F Assunção,May Soe Aung,Juha Auvinen,Mária Avdičová,Shina Avi,Ana Azevedo,Mohsen Azimi-Nezhad,Fereidoun Azizi,Mehrdad Azmin,Bontha Babu,Maja Bæksgaard Jørgensen,Azli Baharudin,Suhad Bahijri,Marta Bakacs,Nagalla Balakrishna,Yulia Balanova,Mohamed Bamoshmoosh,Maciej Banach,José Banegas,Joanna Baran,Rafał Baran,Carlo Barbagallo,Alberto Barceló,Maja Baretić,Amina Barkat,Joaquin Barnoya,Lena Barrera,Marta Barreto,Aluisio Barros,Mauro Virgílio Gomes Barros,Anna Bartosiewicz,Abdul Basit,Joao Luiz D Bastos,Iqbal Bata,Anwar Batieha,Aline Batista,Rosangela Batista,Zhamilya Battakova,Louise Baur

Published Date

2023/3/29

Optimal growth and development in childhood and adolescence is crucial for lifelong health and well-being 1–6. Here we used data from 2,325 population-based studies, with measurements of height and weight from...

Longitudinal Growth and Undernutrition Burden Among Term Low Birth Weight Newborns Reared in Adverse Socioeconomic Conditions in Delhi

Authors

Manpreet Kaur,Geeta Trilok-Kumar,Sikha Sinha,Suzanne Filteau,Anura V Kurpad,Clive Osmond,Harshpal Singh Sachdev

Journal

Indian pediatrics

Published Date

2023/11

BackgroundThere is limited data in term low birth weight neonates from urban poor settings on the incidence of and recovery from undernutrition and co-existence of its different forms, under conditions of appropriate health and nutrition care counselling.ObjectivesTo determine the longitudinal growth and undernutrition burden among term low birth weight newborns reared in adverse conditions, but with appropriate counselling.MethodsThe study reports follow-up data from DIVIDS trial. 2079 term low birth weight (1800–2499 grams) newborns from an urban poor setting were followed-up for growth from 0 to 26 weeks (n=1282) and at 2.8–6.8 years (n=912). Using Cole LMS approach, age- and sex-specific internal z scores were computed and subsequently adjusted for the effect of a vitamin D intervention and potential bias due to attrition. Back-transformed measurements were then used to compute WHO z scores …

The long-term consequences of early life exposure to tsunami and conflict on adolescents in Sri Lanka

Authors

Delan Devakumar,Laura Busert,Manoji Gitanjali Sathiadas,Pushpika Jayawardana,Angela Arulpragasam,Clive Osmond,Caroline HD Fall,Jonathan CK Wells,V Pujitha Wickramasinghe

Journal

Asia Pacific Journal of Public Health

Published Date

2023/3

The consequences for adolescent health due to early life exposure to natural disasters combined with war are not known. We collected data from adolescents aged 12-13 years in Sri Lanka whose mothers were pregnant during the Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004 in a tsunami-affected region (n = 22), conflict-affected region (n = 35), conflict-plus-tsunami-affected region (n = 29), or controls in areas unaffected by either (n = 24). Adjusted BMI-for-age z-scores were 1.3 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.4, 2.2), 1.0 (95% CI 0.2, 1.9), and 2.0 (95% CI 1.1, 2.9) for conflict, tsunami, and conflict-plus-tsunami, respectively, compared with the control group. Greater skinfold thickness and higher diastolic blood pressure were found in adolescents born in the conflict zone but no differences were found in height, head circumference, and waist circumference, or blood results, with the exception of serum insulin. Being born after a …

Growth in Infancy and Childhood and Age at Menarche in Five Low-or Middle-Income Countries: Consortium of Health Orientated Research in Transitional Societies (COHORTS)

Authors

Lukhanyo H Nyati,Shane A Norris,Lisa K Micklesfield,Linda S Adair,Caroline Fall,Nanette R Lee,Reynaldo Martorell,Clive Osmond,Linda M Richter,Harshpal S Sachdev,Bernardo Horta,Aryeh D Stein,Natalia P Lima,Helen Goncalves,Bruna Goncalves C da Silva,Paula D de Oliveira,Joseph Murray,Sara Naicker,Santosh K Bhargava,Lakshmy Ramakrishnan,Sikha Sinha,Bhaskar Singh,Manuel Ramirez-Zea,Maria F Kroker-Lobos,Isabelita Bas,Sonny Agustin Bechayda,Delia Carba,Tita Lorna Perez

Journal

The Journal of nutrition

Published Date

2023/9/1

BackgroundEarlier age at menarche is associated with behavioral and noncommunicable disease risks. The influence of birth weight (BW) (intrauterine) and postnatal growth on age at menarche is not well studied in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).ObjectiveTherefore, we investigated these associations in 5 LMIC birth cohorts.MethodsWe analyzed data from Brazil, Guatemala, India, the Philippines, and South Africa (n = 3983). We derived stunting (< −2 SD scores) at 24 mo using the WHO child growth standards. We generated interaction terms with categorized BW and conditional weight (lighter < 0 or heavier ≥ 0), and height (shorter < 0 or taller ≥ 0) z-scores. We categorized early-, modal-, and late-onset menarche and used multilevel ordinal regression. We used multilevel linear regression on continuous age at menarche.ResultsMean age at menarche was 12.8 y (95% CI: 12.7 12.9). BW was not …

Global variations in diabetes mellitus based on fasting glucose and haemogloblin A1c

Authors

Bin Zhou,Kate E Sheffer,James E Bennett,Edward W Gregg,Goodarz Danaei,Rosie K Singleton,Jonathan E Shaw,Anu Mishra,Victor Lhoste,Rodrigo M Carrillo-Larco,Andre P Kengne,Nowell H Phelps,Rachel A Heap,Archie W Rayner,Gretchen A Stevens,Chris J Paciorek,Leanne M Riley,Melanie J Cowan,Stefan Savin,Stephen Vander Hoorn,Yuan Lu,Meda E Pavkov,Giuseppina Imperatore,Carlos A Aguilar-Salinas,Noor Ani Ahmad,Ranjit Mohan Anjana,Kairat Davletov,Farshad Farzadfar,Clicerio González-Villalpando,Young-Ho Khang,Hyeon Chang Kim,Tiina Laatikainen,Avula Laxmaiah,Jean Claude N Mbanya,KM Venkat Narayan,Ambady Ramachandran,Alisha N Wade,Tomasz Zdrojewski,Mohsen Abbasi-Kangevari,Hanan F Abdul Rahim,Niveen M Abu-Rmeileh,Shalkar Adambekov,Robert J Adams,Wichai Aekplakorn,Imelda A Agdeppa,Javad Aghazadeh-Attari,Charles Agyemang,Ali Ahmadi,Naser Ahmadi,Nastaran Ahmadi,Soheir H Ahmed,Kamel Ajlouni,Halima Al-Hina,Badreya Al-Lahou,Jawad A Al-Lawati,Deena Al Asfoor,Nawal M Al Qaoud,Monira Alarouj,Fadia AlBuhairan,Shahla AlDhukair,Maryam A Aldwairji,Mohamed M Ali,Farbod Alinezhad,Abdullah Alkandari,Husam F Alomirah,Eman Aly,Deepak N Amarapurkar,Lars Bo Andersen,Sigmund A Anderssen,Dolores S Andrade,Alireza Ansari-Moghaddam,Hajer Aounallah-Skhiri,Tahir Aris,Nimmathota Arlappa,Krishna K Aryal,Felix K Assah,Batyrbek Assembekov,Juha Auvinen,Mária Avdičová,Kishwar Azad,Mohsen Azimi-Nezhad,Fereidoun Azizi,Flora Bacopoulou,Nagalla Balakrishna,Mohamed Bamoshmoosh,Maciej Banach,Piotr Bandosz,José R Banegas,Carlo M Barbagallo,Alberto Barceló,Maja Baretić,Lena Barrera,Abdul Basit,Anwar M Batieha,Aline P Batista,Louise A Baur,Antonisamy Belavendra,Habiba Ben Romdhane,Mikhail Benet,Salim Berkinbayev,Antonio Bernabe-Ortiz,Ximena Berrios Carrasola,Heloísa Bettiol,Augustin F Beybey,Santosh K Bhargava,Elysée Claude Bika Lele,Mukharram M Bikbov,Bihungum Bista,Peter Bjerregaard,Espen Bjertness,Marius B Bjertness,Cecilia Björkelund,Katia V Bloch,Anneke Blokstra,Simona Bo,Martin Bobak,Jose G Boggia,Marialaura Bonaccio,Alice Bonilla-Vargas,Herman Borghs,Pascal Bovet,Imperia Brajkovich,Hermann Brenner,Lizzy M Brewster,Garry R Brian,Yajaira Briceño,Miguel Brito,Anna Bugge,Frank Buntinx,Antonio Cabrera de León,Roberta B Caixeta,Günay Can,Ana Paula C Cândido,Mario V Capanzana,Naděžda Čapková,Eduardo Capuano,Rocco Capuano,Vincenzo Capuano,Viviane C Cardoso,Axel C Carlsson,Felipe F Casanueva,Laura Censi,Marvin Cervantes‐Loaiza,Parinya Chamnan,Snehalatha Chamukuttan,Queenie Chan,Fadi J Charchar,Nish Chaturvedi,Huashuai Chen,Bahman Cheraghian

Published Date

2023

Fasting plasma glucose (FPG) and haemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) are both used to diagnose diabetes, but may identify different people as having diabetes. We used data from 117 population-based studies and quantified, in different world regions, the prevalence of diagnosed diabetes, and whether those who were previously undiagnosed and detected as having diabetes in survey screening had elevated FPG, HbA1c, or both. We developed prediction equations for estimating the probability that a person without previously diagnosed diabetes, and at a specific level of FPG, had elevated HbA1c, and vice versa. The age-standardised proportion of diabetes that was previously undiagnosed, and detected in survey screening, ranged from 30% in the high-income western region to 66% in south Asia. Among those with screen-detected diabetes with either test, the agestandardised proportion who had elevated levels of both FPG and HbA1c was 29-39% across regions; the remainder had discordant elevation of FPG or HbA1c. In most low- and middle-income regions, isolated elevated HbA1c more common than isolated elevated FPG. In these regions, the use of FPG alone may delay diabetes diagnosis and underestimate diabetes prevalence. Our prediction equations help allocate finite resources for measuring HbA1c to reduce the global gap in diabetes diagnosis and surveillance.

Echocardiography protocol and cardiometabolic phenotyping in Indian birth cohorts—the IndEcho study

Authors

Senthil K Vasan,Anoop George Alex,Ambuj Roy,Mahasampath Gowri,Sikha Sinha,Jenifer Suresh,Reesa Susan Philip,Jolly Kochumon,Neetu Jaiswal,Geethanjali Arulappan,Lakshmy Ramakrishnan,Harshpal Singh Sachdev,Nikhil Tandon,Nihal Thomas,Felix Jebasingh,Clive Osmond,Fredrik Karpe,Santosh K Bhargava,Belavendra Antonisamy,Dorairaj Prabhakaran,Caroline HD Fall,Viji S Thomson

Journal

Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine

Published Date

2023/7/13

Background Asian Indians are at higher risk of cardiometabolic disease compared to other ethnic groups, and the age of onset is typically younger. Cardiac structure and function are poorly characterized in this ethnic group. In this study, we describe image-acquisition methods and the reproducibility of measurements and detailed echocardiography characteristics in two large Indian population-based cohorts (the New Delhi and Vellore Birth Cohorts) from India. Methods The IndEcho study captured transthoracic echocardiographic measurements of cardiac structure and function from 2,322 men and women aged 43–50 years. M-mode measurements in the parasternal long axis (PLAX) and 2-dimensional (2D) short axis recordings at the mitral valve, mid-papillary and apical level were recorded. Apical 2D recordings of two- three- and four-chamber (2C, 3C and 4C) views and Doppler images (colour, pulsed and continuous) were recorded in cine-loop format. Left ventricular (LV) mass, LV hypertrophy, and indices of LV systolic and diastolic function were derived. Results Echocardiographic measurements showed good/excellent technical reproducibility. Hetero-geneity across sites, sex and rural/urban differences in cardiac structure and function were observed. Overall, this cohort of South Asian Indians had smaller LV mass and normal systolic and diastolic function when compared with published data on other Asian Indians and the West, (LV mass indexed for body surface area: Delhi men: 68 g/m2, women 63.9; Vellore men: 65.8, women 61.6) but were within ethnic-specific reference ranges. The higher prevalence of obesity, diabetes and …

Early-life stature, preschool cognitive development, schooling attainment, and cognitive functioning in adulthood: a prospective study in four birth cohorts

Authors

Aryeh D Stein,Linda S Adair,Georgina Donati,Charlotte Wray,Linda M Richter,Shane A Norris,Alan Stein,Reynaldo Martorell,Manuel Ramirez-Zea,Ana MB Menezes,Joseph Murray,Cesar Victora,Nanette Lee,Isabelita Bas,Alysse Kowalski,Ann DiGirolamo,Gaia Scerif,Feziwe Mpondo,Delia Belleza,Lukhanyo Nyati,Clive Osmond,Judith Rafaelita Borja,Delia Carba,Tita Lorna Perez,Sonny Agustin Bechavda,Maria F Kroker-Lobos,Jithin S Varghese,Fernando C Barros,Fernando P Hartwig,Bernardo L Horta,Fernando C Wehrmeister

Journal

The Lancet Global Health

Published Date

2023/1/1

BackgroundNutrition is important for growth and brain development and therefore cognitive ability. Growth faltering in early childhood, an important indicator of early adversity, is associated with poorer developmental outcomes, some into adulthood, but this association probably reflects early-life deprivation. We aimed to investigate the associations between early-life stature, child IQ, and adult IQ.MethodsIn this cohort study, we used prospective longitudinal data collected in four birth cohorts from Brazil (born in 1993), Guatemala (born in 1969–77), the Philippines (born in 1983–84), and South Africa (born in 1990). Using multivariable linear models, we estimated the relative contributions of early-life stature, child IQ, and schooling (highest school year completed) to adult IQ, including interaction effects among the early-childhood measures and schooling.FindingsWe included 2614 individuals in the analysis. Early …

Size at birth, lifecourse factors, and cognitive function in late life: findings from the MYsore study of Natal effects on Ageing and Health (MYNAH) cohort in South India

Authors

Murali Krishna,Ghattu V Krishnaveni,Veena Sargur,Kalyanaraman Kumaran,Mohan Kumar,Kiran Nagaraj,Patsy Coakley,Samuel Chirstaprasad Karat,Giriraj R Chandak,Mathew Varghese,Martin Prince,Clive Osmond,Caroline HD Fall

Journal

International Psychogeriatrics

Published Date

2022/4

ObjectiveTo examine if smaller size at birth, an indicator of growth restriction in utero, is associated with lower cognition in late life, and whether this may be mediated by impaired early life brain development and/or adverse cardiometabolic programming.DesignLongitudinal follow-up of a birth cohort.SettingCSI Holdsworth Memorial Hospital (HMH), Mysore South India.Participants721 men and women (55–80 years) whose size at birth was recorded at HMH. Approximately 20 years earlier, a subset (n = 522) of them had assessments for cardiometabolic disorders in mid-life.MeasurementsStandardized measurement of cognitive function, depression, sociodemographic, and lifestyle factors; blood tests and assessments for cardiometabolic disordersResults:Participants who were heavier at birth had higher composite cognitive scores (0.12 SD per SD birth weight [95% CI 0.05, 0.19] p = 0.001) in late life. Other …

Weight-for-height is associated with an overestimation of thinness burden in comparison to BMI-for-age in under-5 populations with high stunting prevalence

Authors

L Naga Rajeev,Monika Saini,Ashish Kumar,Sikha Sinha,Clive Osmond,Harshpal Singh Sachdev

Journal

International Journal of Epidemiology

Published Date

2022/6/1

Background Thinness at <5 years of age, also known as wasting, is used to assess the nutritional status of populations for programmatic purposes. Thinness may be defined when either weight-for-height or body-mass-index-for-age (BMI-for-age) are below –2 SD of the respective World Health Organization standards. These definitions were compared for quantifying the burden of thinness. Methods Theoretical consequences of ignoring age were evaluated by comparing, at varying height-for-age z-scores, the age- and sex-specific cut-offs of BMI that would define thinness with these two metrics. Thinness prevalence was then compared in simulated populations (short, intermediate and tall) and real-life data sets from research and the National Family Health Survey-4 (NFHS-4) in India. Results In short (–2 SD) children, the BMI cut-offs with weight-for …

Intergenerational change in anthropometry of children and adolescents in the New Delhi Birth Cohort

Authors

Sikha Sinha,Dheeraj Shah,Clive Osmond,Caroline HD Fall,Santosh K Bhargava,Harshpal Singh Sachdev

Journal

International Journal of Epidemiology

Published Date

2022/2/1

Background A comparison of the anthropometry of children and adolescents with that of their parents at the same age may provide a more precise measure of intergenerational changes in linear growth and body mass index (BMI). Methods New Delhi Birth Cohort participants (F1), born between 1969 and 1972, were followed up for anthropometry at birth and at 6-monthly intervals until 21 years of age. At variable intervals 1447 children, aged 0–19 years (F2) and born to 818 F1 participants, were measured (weight and height), providing 2236 sets of anthropometries. Intergenerational changes (F2-F1) in height and BMI [absolute and standard deviation (SD) units] were computed by comparing children with their parents at corresponding ages. Results F2 children were taller (P < 0.001) than their parents at corresponding ages; the increase {mean [95 …

Early life influences on hearing in adulthood: A systematic review and two-step individual patient data meta-analysis

Authors

Piers Dawes,John Newall,Petra L Graham,Clive Osmond,Mikaela B von Bonsdorff,Johan Gunnar Eriksson

Published Date

2022/5/1

Objectives:Adverse prenatal and early childhood development may increase susceptibility of hearing loss in adulthood. The objective was to assess whether indices of early development are associated with adult-onset hearing loss in adults≥ 18 years.Design:In a systematic review and meta-analysis, four electronic databases were searched for studies reporting associations between indices of early development (birth weight and adult height) and adult-onset hearing loss in adults≥ 18 years. We screened studies, extracted data, and assessed risk of bias. Authors were contacted to provide adjusted odds ratios from a logistic regression model for relationships between birth weight/adult height and normal/impaired hearing enabling a two-step individual patient data random-effects meta-analysis to be carried out. The study is registered with PROSPERO, CRD42020152214.Results:Four studies of birth weight and …

Conditional wealth to estimate association of wealth mobility with health and human capital in low-and middle-income country cohorts

Authors

Jithin Sam Varghese,Clive Osmond,Aryeh D Stein

Journal

BMC Medical Research Methodology

Published Date

2022/10/27

Temporally harmonized asset indices allow the study of changes in relative wealth (mean, variance, social mobility) over time and its association with adult health and human capital in cohort studies. Conditional measures are the unexplained residuals of an indicator regressed on its past values. Using such measures, previously used to study the relative importance of key life stages for anthropometric growth, we can identify specific life stages during which changes in relative wealth are important for adult health in longitudinal studies. We discuss the assumptions, strengths and limitations of this methodology as applied to relative wealth. We provide an illustrative example using a publicly-available longitudinal dataset and show how relative wealth changes at different life stages are differentially associated with body mass index in adulthood.

Greater Reduction of Blood Pressure with Exercise Intervention Than Standard Care After Recent Ischaemic Atroke: A Randomized Clinical Trial

Authors

Patrice Francis-Emmanuel,Michael Boyne,Alice Ryan,Charlene Hafer-Macko,Richard Macko,Clive Osmond,Marilyn Lawrence-Wright,Curtis Green,Gail Nelson,Terrence Forrester

Published Date

2022/1/5

Context and Objectives: Ischaemic stroke (IS) causes disability and uses massive public health resources. Cumulative disability from recurrence may be reduced with cardiometabolic risk reduction strategies eg, lowering blood pressure (BP). We hypothesized that intensive exercise plus best available care in adults with recent IS improves fitness, glucose metabolism, muscle protein synthesis in paretic limbs compared to controls. BP changes were compared between intervention (INT) and controls (CON).Research Design and Setting: A randomised, interventional clinical trial conducted in Jamaican adults subjects: We investigate 103 adults with recent IS and residual weakness. Forty-nine subjects (24 women: mean age 61.5; 25 men: mean age 63.8) received task-oriented exercise training (TEXT) plus best available care. Fifty-four subjects (23 women: mean age 60.2; 31 men: mean age 61.3) received best care, including exercise advice.Measurements: We measured baseline, 3-month and 6-month BP.Results: After recent IS, TEXT plus best available care reduced systolic BP by 21 mmHg and diastolic by 12 mmHg compared to controls, independent of medication adherence, body composition; stroke severity. Men in the TEXT group had increased lean mass (P< 0.007), VO2 max (P= 0.03); 6-minute walk distance (P= 0.003). Leg press on paretic (P= 0.004) and non-paretic (P< 0.001) increased with TEXT vs CON over 6 months, in both sexes (P-values for sex difference> 0.2). Time-to-chair-rise decreased in both sexes who received intervention vs controls (P< 0.04) Conclusions: TEXT results in significant blood pressure reduction in adults …

Effects of early-life poverty on health and human capital in children and adolescents: analyses of national surveys and birth cohort studies in LMICs

Authors

Cesar G Victora,Fernando P Hartwig,Luis P Vidaletti,Reynaldo Martorell,Clive Osmond,Linda M Richter,Aryeh D Stein,Aluisio JD Barros,Linda S Adair,Fernando C Barros,Santosh K Bhargava,Bernardo L Horta,Maria F Kroker-Lobos,Nanette R Lee,Ana Maria B Menezes,Joseph Murray,Shane A Norris,Harshpal S Sachdev,Alan Stein,Jithin S Varghese,Zulfiqar A Bhutta,Robert E Black

Published Date

2022/4/30

The survival and nutrition of children and, to a lesser extent, adolescents have improved substantially in the past two decades. Improvements have been linked to the delivery of effective biomedical, behavioural, and environmental interventions; however, large disparities exist between and within countries. Using data from 95 national surveys in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs), we analyse how strongly the health, nutrition, and cognitive development of children and adolescents are related to early-life poverty. Additionally, using data from six large, long-running birth cohorts in LMICs, we show how early-life poverty can have a lasting effect on health and human capital throughout the life course. We emphasise the importance of implementing multisectoral anti-poverty policies and programmes to complement specific health and nutrition interventions delivered at an individual level, particularly at a …

Preterm birth and infant diurnal cortisol regulation

Authors

David Q Stoye,James P Boardman,Clive Osmond,Gemma Sullivan,Gillian Lamb,Gill S Black,Natalie ZM Homer,Nina Nelson,Elvar Theodorsson,Rebecca M Reynolds,Evalotte Mörelius

Journal

Archives of Disease in Childhood-Fetal and Neonatal Edition

Published Date

2022/9/1

BackgroundHypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis adaptation is a potential mechanism linking early life exposures with later adverse health. This study tested the hypothesis that preterm birth is associated with adaptation of diurnal cortisol regulation across infancy.MethodsA secondary analysis was conducted of saliva cortisol measured morning, midday and evening, monthly, across infancy, as part of a birth cohort conducted in Linköping, Sweden. Diurnal cortisol regulation of infants born extremely preterm (n=24), very preterm (n=27) and at term (n=130) were compared across infancy through random coefficients regression models.ResultsCompared with infants born at term, infants born extremely preterm (−17.2%, 95% CI: −30.7 to −1.2), but not very preterm (1.7%, 95% CI: −14.1 to 20.4), had a flattened diurnal slope across infancy.ConclusionsExtremely preterm birth is associated with a flattened diurnal …

Health and development from preconception to 20 years of age and human capital

Authors

Robert E Black,Li Liu,Fernando P Hartwig,Francisco Villavicencio,Andrea Rodriguez-Martinez,Luis P Vidaletti,Jamie Perin,Maureen M Black,Hannah Blencowe,Danzhen You,Lucia Hug,Bruno Masquelier,Simon Cousens,Amber Gove,Tyler Vaivada,Diana Yeung,Jere Behrman,Reynaldo Martorell,Clive Osmond,Aryeh D Stein,Linda S Adair,Caroline HD Fall,Bernardo Horta,Ana MB Menezes,Manuel Ramirez-Zea,Linda M Richter,George C Patton,Eran Bendavid,Majid Ezzati,Zulfiqar A Bhutta,Joy E Lawn,Cesar G Victora

Published Date

2022/4/30

Optimal health and development from preconception to adulthood are crucial for human flourishing and the formation of human capital. The Nurturing Care Framework, as adapted to age 20 years, conceptualises the major influences during periods of development from preconception, through pregnancy, childhood, and adolescence that affect human capital. In addition to mortality in children younger than 5 years, stillbirths and deaths in 5–19-year-olds are important to consider. The global rate of mortality in individuals younger than 20 years has declined substantially since 2000, yet in 2019 an estimated 8·6 million deaths occurred between 28 weeks of gestation and 20 years of age, with more than half of deaths, including stillbirths, occurring before 28 days of age. The 1000 days from conception to 2 years of age are especially influential for human capital. The prevalence of low birthweight is high in sub …

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What is clive osmond's h-index at University of Southampton?

The h-index of clive osmond has been 71 since 2020 and 148 in total.

What are clive osmond's top articles?

The articles with the titles of

Worldwide trends in underweight and obesity from 1990 to 2022: a pooled analysis of 3663 population-representative studies with 222 million children, adolescents, and adults

Programming of cardiac metabolism by miR-15b-5p, a miRNA released in cardiac extracellular vesicles following ischemia-reperfusion injury

Peri-conceptional diet patterns and the risk of gestational diabetes mellitus in South Indian women

Comparison of weight for height and BMI for age for estimating overnutrition burden in under-five populations with high stunting prevalence

Diminishing benefits of urban living for growth and development of school-aged children and adolescents in the 21st century

Longitudinal Growth and Undernutrition Burden Among Term Low Birth Weight Newborns Reared in Adverse Socioeconomic Conditions in Delhi

The long-term consequences of early life exposure to tsunami and conflict on adolescents in Sri Lanka

Growth in Infancy and Childhood and Age at Menarche in Five Low-or Middle-Income Countries: Consortium of Health Orientated Research in Transitional Societies (COHORTS)

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are the top articles of clive osmond at University of Southampton.

What are clive osmond's research interests?

The research interests of clive osmond are: Statistics, Developmental Origins of Health and Disease, Epidemiology

What is clive osmond's total number of citations?

clive osmond has 121,523 citations in total.

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