If you were down on Bristol Harbourside this weekend you may have noticed an event at MShed, or heard mention of ‘Children of the 90s’. Who are these children, and what were they doing at the museum? The answer involves a journey more than 20 years back in time, and the vision and foresight of Bristol Professor Jean Golding.
Showing posts with label Children of the 90's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Children of the 90's. Show all posts
Monday, 5 December 2011
Tuesday, 2 August 2011
Raise A Glass To The Birth Cohort
In yesterday’s post, Suzi pointed out how Children of the 90s has helped her research, and last Friday, BBC Breakfast had a feature on a study that is already a couple of years old, yet remains very much in its infancy. As with Children of the 90s, ‘Born in Bradford’ is a longitudinal cohort: a study which recruits a group of participants, sometimes well before their birth certificates are signed, and follows them during the course of their lives (often alongside their parents and/or other relatives). Herculean efforts are put in to record buckets of information about them along the way. Such a study is an immensely rich and important resource.
Studies begin with certain goals in mind and develop over time to address new research questions and shifting paradigms in medicine. For example, early work from Children Of The 90s helped to resolve contention about which way we should lie our babies at night to lower the risk of cot death (that’s face up, new parents!). Nowadays, the participants are collectively entering their third decade walking this earth, and continue to help us answer questions about the incalculable complexities of maintaining good health in the 21st century.
Many types of information and measures are recorded by cohorts (all with the consent of participants, of course). These can range from simple questionnaires about things like family income and leisure activity preferences to in-depth measures taken at medical examinations, including blood samples used to measure various biochemical properties. Since the advent of the human genome project in 2003, we are increasingly being able to survey the genetic information of participants to explore what effects our DNA can have on our propensity for developing certain traits or diseases.
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