Parental imprisonment, childhood behavioral problems, and adolescent and young adult cardiometabolic risk: results from a prospective Australian birth cohort study
Michael E. Roettger, Jolene Tan, Brian Houle, Jake M. Najman, Tara McGee

TL;DR
This study finds that parental imprisonment and childhood behavioral issues are linked to higher cardiometabolic risk in women as they age.
Contribution
The study is the first to explore how childhood behavioral problems and parental imprisonment jointly affect long-term cardiometabolic risk in a sex-specific manner.
Findings
Parental imprisonment was associated with higher systolic blood pressure in women at age 30.
Childhood behavioral issues moderated BMI and waist circumference in women across adolescence and adulthood.
Aggression and attention-related behaviors were linked to increasing BMI in women as they aged.
Abstract
Recent studies have demonstrated that parental imprisonment (PI) is associated with cardiometabolic risk later in life. However, underlying risk factors for these associations have not previously been explored. Using a life course framework, the present study explores how early childhood emotional and behavioral dysregulation and PI may be associated with progressive cardiometabolic risk factors in adolescence and young adulthood among male and female respondents in an Australian birth cohort. The study follows a subset of 7,223 live, singleton births from 1981 to 1984 in Brisbane, Australia where data was collected on parental imprisonment at ages 5 & 14 and behaviors from the Child Behavioral Checklist (CBCL) at age 5. Our sample examines 1,884 males and 1,758 females whose mothers completed prenatal, age 5, and age 14 interviews and respondents completed one or more interviews at a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional Development · Child and Adolescent Health · Birth, Development, and Health
