Independent and Joint Effects of Prenatal Incense-Burning Smoke Exposure and Children’s Early Outdoor Activity on Preschoolers’ Obesity
Meimei Chen, Esben Strodl, Weikang Yang, Xiaona Yin, Guomin Wen, Dengli Sun, Danxia Xian, Yafen Zhao, Weiqing Chen

TL;DR
Exposure to incense smoke during pregnancy and low outdoor activity in early childhood may increase obesity risk in preschoolers.
Contribution
This study is the first to investigate the independent and combined effects of prenatal incense-burning smoke exposure and early outdoor activity on preschool obesity.
Findings
Prenatal incense-burning smoke exposure increased obesity risk (AOR = 1.13).
Lower outdoor activity frequency or duration in early childhood was linked to higher obesity risk.
Combined effects of smoke exposure and low outdoor activity further increased obesity risk.
Abstract
Incense burning is a significant source of indoor air pollution in many Asian regions. There is emerging evidence that maternal prenatal exposure to incense-burning smoke may be a risk factor for childhood obesity. We aimed to extend this new line of research by investigating the independent and joint effect of incense-burning smoke exposure, and children’s outdoor activity in early life, on preschoolers’ obesity. A total of 69,637 mother–child dyads were recruited from all kindergartens in the Longhua District of Shenzhen, China. Information on sociodemographic characteristics, maternal exposure to incense-burning smoke (IBS) during pregnancy, and frequency and duration of outdoor activity at the age of 1–3 years was collected by a self-administered questionnaire. In addition, the heights and weights of the children were measured by the research team. Logistic regression models and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAir Quality and Health Impacts · Noise Effects and Management · Urban Transport and Accessibility
