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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk The Proliferation of Birth Cohort Studies in the developed and developing world Professor Heather Joshi Director Centre for Longitudinal Studies Institute of Education Workshop on Lifecourse, Wellbeing and public policy in Developing countries Norwich November 9-10th 2006
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk Structure of presentation 1.The scientific and policy relevance of birth cohort studies 2.Introduction to the British Birth Cohort studies 3.Some findings from long-term follow-up in the GB studies, 1958 and 1970 cohorts 4.International proliferation 5. Young Lives
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk 1. Why cohort studies are important Continuing birth cohort studies are expensive compared to cross- sectional surveys, but they are important because: They tell the stories of the lives of the members in a way that is ‘joined up’ across different aspects of their lives at any one time and from the past into the future They record how long someone occupies a given state They link these stories into the family and social context of growing up and growing old. They link events, characteristics, health and achievements across across generations They enable investigation of cause & effects They document convergence and polarisation between individuals over time.
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk Research questions best addressed by cohort data Long term outcomes of experiences and decisions in early life Medium and short-term outcomes & links between different life domains (e.g. health and employment) Descriptions of individual trajectories – careers, relationships, fertility, poverty and disadvantage The links between social change and the changing experiences of different cohorts Intergenerational transmission of advantage and disadvantage and the processes involved
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk 2. British Birth Cohort Studies Fully representative samples of the British population Based on one week’s births - approximately 17,000 babies Followed up from birth into adulthood Four British Birth Cohort Studies 1946 : National Survey of Health and Development (MRC funded) 1958 : National Child Development Study 1970 : British Cohort Study 1970 2000/1: UK Millennium Cohort Study Housed at CLS
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NCDS follow-ups and sources of information
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk BCS70 Follow-ups & information sources
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk MCS: existing and planned follow-ups
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk Design Features of MCS Cohort born over 12 month period Season of birth effects Spread workload of professional interviewers Sampling necessitated Geographically clustered by electoral ward Wards being disproportionately stratified Better approach to issue of community & local services Content multi-purpose & multidisciplinary but with greater emphasis on social rather than medical
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Cohort Comparisons 7 11 16 23 33 46 50 42 5 10 34 30 26 16 38 Life cycle effects 3.Long-term follow-up of 1958 and 1970 births
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk Some key findings Mothers who smoke during pregnancy are more likely to have children with low birth weight and, by age 16, reduced height and lower reading and mathematics attainment. Breast feeding is associated with reduced risk of heart disease in adult life. A key predictor of children's educational achievement is interest shown by parents. Chronic lower respiratory tract illness in adults is associated with poor home circumstances earlier in life.
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk Policy Relevance of the Cohort Studies NCDS and BCS70 have been applied to: The health impact of smoking in pregnancy Child Poverty Declining intergenerational mobility Antecedents and consequences of disability Health continuities over the lifecourse Health inequalities Determinants of crime and anti-social behaviour Social and economic returns to education and training Access and barriers to higher education Improving adult basic skills Women’s opportunities in employment Maternal employment and child outcomes MCS has been used in: National Evaluation of Sure Start National Evaluation of Children’s Fund
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk Doomed to Failure? Resilience is: Positive adjustment despite the experience of adversity Continued positive or effective functioning in adverse circumstances Recovery after a significant trauma Beating the odds SCHOON, I. (2006) Risk and Resilience: Adaptations in Changing Times.. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk Identification of Resilience ( example from NCDS) Socio-economic Adversity Low (none) High (4+) Outcome (Reading at 7) Positive (above average) Negative ( below average) Favourable experience of life 69% Resilience 37% Unexpected negative outcome 31% Vulnerability 63% n = 2044n = 2341
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Educational Attainment: Mid childhood to adolescence Vulnerable Resilient Unexpected Multiple Advantage (Schoon, 2006)
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Well-Being in adulthood VulnerableResilient Unexpected low Multiple Advantage NCDS aged 33 BCS70 aged 30 (Schoon, 2006)
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk What can we learn? Complex multi-factorial processes of protection and disadvantage An interplay of resources, risks and competences (“planfullness”) Never too early to intervene Never too late The historic, geographical and social context also matters.
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk Unique qualities of the Birth Cohort Studies Detailed prospective longitudinal data from early life including: Health Family background Childhood circumstances Assessments of ability Life history data on work, fertility, relationships, housing collected throughout adult life Information on cohort members’ children allowing examination of intergenerational transmission Very large sample progressing through major transitions at the same time
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk 5. Child Cohort Studies go global Showing starting dates Longitudinal Study of Children and Young People in Canada.. Several cohorts Since 1994 Danish National Birth Cohort: 1996 Young Lives: India, Ethiopia,Vietnam and Peru, 2 cohorts: 2002 Longitudinal Study of Australian Children, two cohorts: 2003 Growing up in Scotland, 2 cohorts : 2004 National Children’s Study USA from 2007 National Longitudinal Study of Children in Ireland: 2007 ELFE, Etude longitudinale française depuis l’enfance France 2008 Jamaica Birth Cohort Studies 1986 Among others….
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk Young Lives 15 year project on child poverty 4 countries India – Andhra Pradesh Vietnam Ethiopia Peru Each country 20 sentinel sites 2 cohorts 2000 age1 and 1000 age 8 in 2002
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk Young lives First survey in data archive 2 nd Survey in field 2006-7 children aged 6 and 12 Funding for further follow up being sought Funding from DfID Joint management by QEH Oxford, Save the Children, country research teams Advocacy, Qualitative Indepth case studies, child participation www.younglives.org,uk
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following lives from birth and through the adult years www.cls.ioe.ac.uk Sourcebooks of research findings
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