External Publications Using GUI Data
Authors | Year ↑ | Title | Link | Journal/Book | Abstract |
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Fitzpatrick, M.P., Hennigan, K., O'Gorman, C.S., McCarron, L. | 2019 | Obesity, diet and lifestyle in 9-year-old children with parentally reported chronic diseases: findings from the Growing Up in Ireland longitudinal child cohort study | Open | Irish Journal of Medical Science | |
Background Aims Methods Results Conclusions | |||||
Gillespie, P., Walsh, S., Cullinan, J., Devane, D. | 2019 | An analysis of antenatal care pathways to mode of birth in Ireland | Open | The Economic and Social Review | |
This paper explores the role of antenatal care in determining mode of birth in the Irish healthcare system using data from the Growing Up in Ireland study. Results indicate that midwifery-led antenatal care is independently associated with significantly higher rates of normal delivery and significantly lower rates of elective caesarean section relative to consultant-led care in both the public and private sectors. Given concerns over increasing rates of caesarean section, our results are consistent with calls nationally and internationally for further investment in midwifery-led antenatal care services, and for stricter regulation of the actors, both providers and patients, engaged in the private antenatal care pathway. | |||||
Healy, C., Coughlan, H., Williams, J., Clarke, M., Kelleher, I., Cannon, M. | 2019 | Changes in the self-concept and risk of psychotic experiences in adolescence: a longitudinal population based cohort study | Open | Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | |
Background We aimed to investigate: (a) the relationship between child and adolescent self-concept and adolescent PEs; and (b) whether changes in self-concept between childhood and adolescence were associated with risk of adolescent PEs. Method Results Conclusions | |||||
Kelly, D., Kelly, A., O'Dowd, T., Hayes, C.B. | 2019 | Antibiotic use in early childhood and risk of obesity: longitudinal analysis of a national cohort | Open | World Journal of Pediatrics | |
Background Methods Results Conclusions | |||||
McCoy, S., Shevlin, M., Rose, R. | 2019 | Secondary school transition for students with special educational needs in Ireland | Open | European Journal of Special Needs Education | |
The transition from primary to secondary school represents one of the key junctions in the educational career of young people. Research has shown that much of the challenge in this transition stems from changing social structures and encountering different learning environments. However, the transition experiences of students with special educational needs (SEN) have received relatively little attention. Drawing on large-scale longitudinal data from over 7000 young people, we examine the extent to which students with different SEN experience additional transition barriers to their peers. The findings show that young people with SEN are more likely to experience a negative transition to secondary school. Furthermore, the type of need matters and students with general learning disabilities and intellectual disabilities are three times more likely to experience poor transition compared to young people without SEN. Transition experiences also vary by gender and socio-economic status, with girls and lower socio-economic groups more at risk. This paper highlights the importance of supporting students through to their second year in secondary education, promoting positive teacher–student interactions and providing additional supports for those with lower achievement in primary school. For students with disabilities, the research highlights a need for more effective transition supports, particularly during the pre-transition period. Keywords | |||||
McCrory, C., Leahy, S., Robeiro, AL., Fraga, S., Barros, H., Avendano, M., Vineis, P., Layte, R. | 2019 | Maternal education inequalities in measured body mass index trajectories in three European countries | Open | Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology | |
Background Objective Methods Results Conclusions | |||||
McDonnell, T., Doyle, O. | 2019 | Maternal employment and childcare during infancy and childhood overweight | Open | Social Science & Medicine | |
Objective Method Results Conclusions | |||||
McNamara, E., Murray, A., Williams, J. | 2019 | Study Profile: Growing Up in Ireland | Open | Longitudinal and Life Course Studies | |
Growing Up in Ireland (GUI) is a two-cohort, longitudinal study of children and young people. The study aims to describe the health and development of Irish children across a range of topics; these include physical and mental health, family socio-demographic status, education, and the child’s behaviour, attitudes and key relationships. The study has been collecting data since 2007, beginning with a child cohort at nine years old (n = 8,568) and then an infant cohort at nine months old (n = 11,134). These data provide researchers and policy makers with a unique analytical tool to explore the well-being of children in Ireland. This paper provides an overview of all the stages involved in the development of the study, from its inception, to the establishment of the study’s aims, objectives and design, the ongoing data collection and panel maintenance, and the many uses of GUI data today. | |||||
Orben, A., Przybylski, A.K. | 2019 | Screens, teens, and psychological well-being: Evidence from three time-use-diary studies | Open | Psychological Science | |
The notion that digital-screen engagement decreases adolescent well-being has become a recurring feature in public, political, and scientific conversation. The current level of psychological evidence, however, is far removed from the certainty voiced by many commentators. There is little clear-cut evidence that screen time decreases adolescent well-being, and most psychological results are based on single-country, exploratory studies that rely on inaccurate but popular self-report measures of digital-screen engagement. In this study, which encompassed three nationally representative large-scale data sets from Ireland, the United States, and the United Kingdom (N = 17,247 after data exclusions) and included time-use-diary measures of digital-screen engagement, we used both exploratory and confirmatory study designs to introduce methodological and analytical improvements to a growing psychological research area. We found little evidence for substantial negative associations between digital-screen engagement—measured throughout the day or particularly before bedtime—and adolescent well-being. | |||||
Palmer, R., Layte, R., Kearney, J. | 2019 | The maternal health behaviour of non-Irish nationals during pregnancy and the effect of time living in Ireland | Open | The Journal of Public Health | |
Objectives Study design Methods Results Conclusions | |||||
Schneider, T. | 2019 | Partnership Dissolution after Childbirth in Ireland: On the Importance of Pregnancy Intentions. | Open | Economic and Social Review | |
Several approaches frame childbirth as an event that can reduce partnership quality, generate work-family conflicts, intensify financial pressures, and increase separation risk. The present study discusses theories of separation in relation to pregnancy intentions leading to a birth and analyses data from Growing Up in Ireland. Transition rate models of parental separation nine months to five years after childbirth show higher risks of separation after pregnancies described as “somewhat too early”, “much too early” and after “unwanted” pregnancies. These differences are due partly to sociodemographic factors that influence unplanned pregnancies and subsequent separation. Increases in workfamily conflicts after birth do not increase separation risk. | |||||
Sunday, S., Kabir, Z. | 2019 | Impact of carers' smoking status on childhood obesity in the Growing Up in Ireland Cohort Study | Open | Environmental Research and Public Health | |
Childhood obesity is a growing concern worldwide. The association between childhood obesity and maternal smoking and/or paternal smoking has been reported. However, few studies have explored the association between childhood obesity and exposure to carers’ smoking status. This study aimed to assess the impact of carers’ smoking status on childhood obesity in a cohort of children enrolled in the Growing up in Ireland (GUI) study. Participants from the GUI infant cohort were categorized into four groups based on their exposure status: Neither caregiver smoked (60.4%), only primary caregiver smoked (13.4%), both caregivers smoked (10.9%). Exposure to primary carers’ smoking (98% are biological mothers) was found to be significantly associated with childhood overweight/obesity at age three (Odds Ratio: 1.30, 95% CI: 1.17–1.46) and at age five (OR: 1.31, 95% CI: 1.16–1.49). Exposure to both carers’ smoking status was significantly associated with increased odds of childhood overweight/obesity across both waves. These findings emphasize the health burden of childhood obesity that may be attributable to maternal smoking postnatally and through early childhood in Ireland. Keywords | |||||
McMahon, G., Creaven, A., Gallagher, S. | 2020 | Stressful life events and adolescent well-being: the role of parent and peer relationships | Open | Stress & Health | |
It is well established that stressful life events (e.g., family bereavements or moving to a new country) are damaging to psychological health and well-being. Indeed, social relationships are often noted as an important factor that can influence well-being and buffer the negative effects of stress. However, the quality and source of these relationships, particularly for adolescents, are often overlooked. Using the Growing Up in Ireland Survey, a population-based study of 13-year-old Irish adolescents (N = 7,525; 51.1% female), the current study examines the quality of both parent and peer relationships as potential mechanisms explaining the association between stressful life events and psychological well-being indices in adolescents. As expected, results showed that stressful life events negatively impacted the psychological well-being of adolescents. Parallel mediation analyses indicated that both parent and peer relationship quality mediated this association. Further exploratory analyses found that for girls, greater numbers of stressful life events were associated with poorer quality relationships with both their parents and peers, and in turn, these were linked to lower levels of psychological well-being. For boys, this effect was only evident for parental relationship quality, but not peers. The implication of these findings for adolescent’s psychological well-being, particularly for girls, is discussed. | |||||
McMullin, P., McGinnity, F., Murray, A., Russell, H. | 2020 | What You Do Versus Who You Are: Home-Learning Activities, Social Origin and Cognitive Skills among Young Children in Ireland | Open | European Sociological Review | |
This article explores the role that home-learning activities (HLAs) play in the relationship between social origin and cognitive development using an Irish birth cohort study, Growing Up in Ireland. Numerous studies using different measures of the home-learning environment (HLE) have shown that it has considerable influence on young children’s cognitive development, and that the HLE is often linked to social origin. We find a social gradient in vocabulary even at age 3 years, with the largest gaps for mothers’ education. Family income, mothers’ education, and social class are also associated with vocabulary independently, though these associations are reduced by adding all three measures simultaneously. The extent of HLAs helps explain a very small part of the education differences and none of the income or social class differences in vocabulary. We find some evidence that HLAs may be more salient for children from families with low income and lower social class backgrounds in terms of supporting vocabulary development, thereby compensating somewhat for disadvantage. HLAs also appear to encourage vocabulary development between age 3 and 5, and play a role in reducing the gap in vocabulary between high- and low-income children. | |||||
Mihut, G., McCoy, S. | 2020 | Examining the experiences of students, teachers and leaders at Educate Together second-level schools | Open | ESRI Research Series 113 | |
Mohan, G., Nolan, A. | 2020 | The impact of prescription drug co-payments for publicly insured families | Open | The European Journal of Health Economics | |
Co-payments for prescription drugs are a common feature of many healthcare systems, although often with exemptions for vulnerable population groups. International evidence demonstrates that cost-sharing for medicines may delay necessary care, increase use of other forms of healthcare and result in poorer health outcomes. Existing studies concentrate on adults and older people, particularly in the US, with relatively less attention afforded to paediatric and European populations. In Ireland, prescription drug co-payments were introduced for the first time for medical cardholders (i.e. those with public health insurance) in October 2010, initially at a cost of €0.50 per item, rising to €1.50 in January 2013, and further increasing to €2.50 in December 2013. Using data from the Growing Up in Ireland longitudinal study of children, and a difference-in-difference research design, we estimate the impact of the introduction (and increase) of these co-payments on health, healthcare utilisation and household financial wellbeing. The introduction of modest co-payments on prescription items was not estimated to impinge on the health of children and parents from low-income families. For the younger Infant Cohort, difference-in-difference estimates indicated that the introduction (and increase) in co-payments was associated with a decrease in GP visits and hospital nights, and a decrease in the proportion of households reporting ‘difficulties with making ends meet’. In contrast, for the older cohort of children (the Child Cohort), co-payments were associated with an increase in GP visiting, and an increase in household deprivation. While the parallel trends assumption for difference-in-difference analysis appeared to be satisfied, further investigation revealed that there were other time-varying observable factors (such as exposure to the economic recession over the period) that affected the treatment and control groups, as well as the two cohorts of children differentially, that may partly explain these divergent results. For example, while the analysis suggests that the introduction of the €0.50 co-payment in 2010 was associated with an increase in the probability of treated families in the Child Cohort being deprived by 9.4 percentage points, the proportion of treated families experiencing unemployment and reductions in household income also increased significantly around the time of the co-payment introduction. This highlights the difficulty in identifying the effect of the co-payment policy in an environment in which assignment to the treatment (i.e. medical cardholder status) was not randomly assigned. | |||||
Nolan, A., Smyth, E. | 2020 | Talking about sex and sexual behaviour of young people in Ireland | Open | ESRI Research Series 112 | |
This report uses data from the ‘98 cohort of Growing Up in Ireland (GUI) to examine when, where and how young people receive information on sex and relationships, and the role of this information in shaping sexual competence (or readiness) and behaviours among Irish adolescents. | |||||
Nolan, A., Smyth, E. | 2020 | Clusters of health behaviours among young adults in Ireland | Open | ESRI Research Series 101 | |
New ESRI research, funded by HSE Health and Wellbeing, examines how 4 key risk factors for disease (smoking, alcohol consumption, physical activity, diet) cluster together among young adults. Using data from the Growing up in Ireland ’98 Cohort at 17 years of age, the research identified 3 distinct health behaviour clusters among young adults in Ireland: a ‘healthy’ group, an ‘unhealthy group’ and an ‘unhealthy smokers and drinkers group’. | |||||
Ó Donnchadha, S., Bramham, J., Greene, C. | 2020 | Rethinking the association between overweight/obesity and ADHD in children: a longitudinal and psychosocial perspective | Open | Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine | |
Objective Method Results Conclusions Keywords | |||||
Robinson, E., Daly, M., Sutin, A. | 2020 | Association of parental identification of child overweight and mental health problems during childhood | Open | International Journal of Obesity volume | |
Background Methods Results Conclusions |