Size at birth and cognitive function among rural adolescents: a life course epidemiology study protocol of the Kisalaya cohort in Mysuru, South India.
Smitha Malenahalli ChandrashekarappaMurali KrishnaKarl KruppPoornima JaykrishnaChaithra V UrsSatyapal Puri GoswamiKavitha RaviAnisa KhanAnjali ArunPiers DawesJohn NewallPurnima MadhivananPublished in: BMJ paediatrics open (2020)
Kisalaya cohort was established in 2008, to provide integrated antenatal care and HIV testing using mobile clinics to improve maternal and child health outcomes. This cohort included pregnant women residing in 144 villages of Mysuru Taluk (rural) who received antenatal care through mobile clinics and delivered their children between 2008 and 2011. Data related to mother-infant dyads for all pregnant women who received care in the Kisalaya programme are available for this study. Presently, children born to women who received care through Kisalaya are adolescents between 10 and 12 years. At this point, information would be collected on sociodemographic data and assessments of mental health, stressful life events, cognition, vision, speech, language, hearing and anthropometric measures would be done and relevant maternal data and child data, available from the cohort would be retracted for analysis. We plan to retrace as many adolescents as possible out of 1544 adolescents who are currently available for study excluding twins, abortions, stillbirths and postdelivery deaths. Analyses will be extended to construct a life course pathway for cognition using structural equation modelling.
Keyphrases
- pregnant women
- young adults
- mental health
- pregnancy outcomes
- healthcare
- palliative care
- physical activity
- electronic health record
- study protocol
- quality improvement
- big data
- hiv testing
- primary care
- gestational age
- affordable care act
- pain management
- autism spectrum disorder
- birth weight
- men who have sex with men
- data analysis
- white matter
- metabolic syndrome
- multiple sclerosis
- artificial intelligence
- risk factors
- preterm infants
- mental illness
- hepatitis c virus
- weight loss