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Being overweight or obese is 'major health problem', particularly among children from low-income families

A study has also found that boys are more likely than girls to find school difficult.

MOST SEVEN AND eight-year-olds are in good health, but obesity remains a major issue for children, according to research compiled by the Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI).

Growing Up in Ireland tracks the development of two nationally representative groups of children: an ‘infant cohort’ interviewed initially at nine months and with subsequent data collected at three, five and seven or eight years of age; and a ‘child cohort’ interviewed initially at nine years of age and subsequently at 13 and at 17 or 18 years.

Findings released today describe how 5,000 seven and eight-year-olds are faring in three aspects of their lives, namely health and development; school and learning; and socio-emotional development, relationships and play.

In terms of health, around 80% of the children were described by parents as being very healthy with no problems, while 19% were described as healthy, but with a few minor problems. This has been the general picture since they were nine months old.

The report states that being overweight or obese “remains a major health problem, particularly among children from low-income families”. Some 15% of children were reported to have been overweight and 5% as obese.

Some 27% of children from the lowest income families were overweight or obese, compared to 16% of children from the highest income families.

The research found that dietary quality was linked to a family’s social class: 36% of children from families in the most socially disadvantaged group had a low dietary quality, compared to 17% of children from families with a professional or managerial background.

School and learning

Most children in the study were reported to have adjusted well at school. The vast majority of mothers (90%) reported that their child had adjusted easily to school. Over three-quarters (77%) of mothers said their seven/eight-year-old did not find it difficult to sit still and listen in class, although 14% said they found it difficult.

Children who find it difficult to settle into school in the beginning continue to find school difficult over time, the research found. Children who were identified by their teachers at five years of age as having a negative attitude or disposition to school were reported by their mothers to have had more adjustment problems two years later.

Identifying the types of children who have negative dispositions to school at an early stage helps to target those most in need of support.

Boys are more likely than girls to find school difficult, according to the study. Mothers reported that 87% of boys compared to 92% of girls found it easy to adjust to school. About one in five (19%) of boys found it difficult to sit still and listen in class, compared to 8% of girls.

The research found that children whose mothers have less education are more likely to find schoolwork difficult. Mothers who had third level education were less likely to say their child usually found schoolwork hard (2%), compared to mothers who had left school at Junior Certificate level or earlier (5%).

Socio-emotional development, relationships and play

Most children in the study are doing well in terms of their socio-emotional development. This was based on reports from the children’s mothers, using internationally developed and widely-used measures of socio-emotional well-being.

Girls generally had higher scores than boys on measures of social skills such as assertion, empathy, responsibility and self-control.

Reading, ‘make-believe’ games and playing on a computer or tablet were the most frequent play activities reported by children’s mothers. Some 35% read for pleasure every day, but 22% did so less than one or two times a week. Boys were more likely to play physically active games but also more computer games. Girls were more likely to enjoy dance, music, crafts and reading.

Boys had more screen time than girls. Among all children, typical screen time on a weekday was reported to be one to two hours, but this increased to over three hours each day at the weekend. Boys had substantially more screen time than girls – 14% of boys and 10% of girls had more than three hours of screen time on a typical weekday. On a typical day at the weekend, 51% of boys and 39% of girls had more than three hours of screen time.

Children whose mothers had lower levels of education have more screen time, the research found. Screen time varied significantly depending on the level of the mother’s education. Some 23% of seven or eight-year-olds whose mothers have Junior Certificate level education or less had more than three hours of screen time on a weekday, compared to 6% of those whose mother had a degree.

Commenting on the findings, James Williams, Research Professor at the ESRI, said the figures provide “very detailed information to highlight the areas of children’s lives where they most need support”.

The findings published today highlight the importance of early identification and intervention for children who have a negative attitude towards school from their earliest experiences of it.

“Negative attitudes towards school at five years of age are reflected in the children having difficulties in adjusting to school two to three years later and to coping with the pace of schoolwork,” Williams said.

Read: Concerns raised about how residents would exit disability centre in event of fire

Read: Dublin City has the highest percentage of unhealthy people in Ireland

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39 Comments
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    Mute James
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    Dec 1st 2014, 12:55 PM

    Warehouse in Ireland please. Having to wait for parcels to ship from UK is not good enough.

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    Mute Mike
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    Dec 1st 2014, 1:48 PM

    Amazons high tech jobs are based in Dublin. The companies warehouses are based in Britain. It’s cheaper than Ireland.

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    Mute See My Vest
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    Dec 1st 2014, 2:14 PM

    Yeah that 1 day prime service is shocking! If I order something now I won’t have it until tomorrow ffs!

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    Mute Paddy Hannigan
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    Dec 1st 2014, 2:54 PM

    Amazon consider Ireland as part of the UK geographicaly for business reasons while for delivery reasons they consider NI and The Republic to be the same.I worked there and it used to provide endless hours of fun trying to explain the situation to idiot ‘nationalists and unionists’ who would take offence to this.Then added to that for tax they are registered in Lux.Most likely they will open a hub here at some point but most items will still have to come from the UK. There just isn’t the population here to justify a warehouse system big enough to hold 17m items.

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    Mute Leslie Skinner
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    Dec 1st 2014, 11:55 AM

    More people out of a job

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    Mute Leopold Dedalus
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    Dec 1st 2014, 12:02 PM

    “hiring 80,000 seasonal workers to meet the coming onslaught of holiday orders.”

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    Mute Simon Barnes
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    Dec 1st 2014, 12:03 PM

    are they? some might be out of a job running around the floor picking items. but someone has to look after the robots, repair them and even build them so jobs are created as well.

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    Mute deerhounddog
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    Dec 1st 2014, 12:12 PM

    Simon,that’s a very short term view.

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    Mute Simon Barnes
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    Dec 1st 2014, 12:13 PM

    how so. remember back in the 80′s when computers were being brought into the office and work place and we were all supposed to be out of jobs?

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    Mute deerhounddog
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    Dec 1st 2014, 12:33 PM

    Simon, they are doing a physical job that only people could do. You can be very sure that any of these working in these huge spaces will have a very long lifespan unlike anything that will be for sale in the future in PC World etc for the home.

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    Mute Jason
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    Dec 1st 2014, 12:39 PM

    Did you actually read the article?

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    Mute Simon Barnes
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    Dec 1st 2014, 12:43 PM

    ” They are doing a physical job that only people could do” — bit of a contradiction there

    I work in this area (electrical / mechanical IT support) if they have 3000 robots then they need a good load of people to back them up. I would very much doubt that 3000 people were let go to be replaced by 3000 machines.
    Machines that run for 24 hours a day need weekly / monthly PM’s. Software upgrades, cleaning and replacing. so while they have a long life span they are continually being looked after unlike your house hold appliances that only get service when they break down,
    Support jobs are also much better paid than picking jobs. And at the end of the day, shouldn’t we be using robots and machines to do the more mundane tasks and upgrading our human work force for the better.

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    Mute J
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    Dec 1st 2014, 12:50 PM

    Simon the robots will become self-aware at 2:14 a.m. Eastern time, August 29th and repair themselves. Only a matter of time.

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    Mute deerhounddog
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    Dec 1st 2014, 1:03 PM

    Jason,Simon. The PEOPLE that did this job last year are highly unlikely to be be servicing these robots. They have most likely been told that there is no work for them. Not everyone has the capacity to up skill. Amazon and those who follow them have not got the welfare of their seasonal workers in mind and are not trying impress ye, they have long term wage bill reductions driving this practice.

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    Mute Daragh O'Mahony
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    Dec 1st 2014, 1:19 PM

    Its called progress….

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    Mute ChocSaltyBallz
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    Dec 1st 2014, 9:44 PM

    Jesusdittyfcukinchrist they took are jobs !

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    Mute deerhounddog
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    Dec 1st 2014, 12:10 PM

    To help the employees, who are they kidding. To CUT THE WAGE BILL.
    PR*cks

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    Mute Benito Rossolini
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    Dec 1st 2014, 1:00 PM

    Johnny 5

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    Mute Frank
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    Dec 1st 2014, 12:07 PM

    Irish Water is currently drafting up an army of robots in the form of precision electronic meters to “help” distribute something which is of a basic right.

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    Mute Frank
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    Dec 1st 2014, 12:23 PM

    Correction: “help” control something which is of a basic right.

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    Mute Jason
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    Dec 1st 2014, 12:40 PM

    Ffs, read this so as not to hear about IW, not everything should be brought back to water. Getting very boring now.

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    Mute Aidan Duggan
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    Dec 1st 2014, 11:59 AM

    My thoughts exactly.

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    Mute Moonshine
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    Dec 1st 2014, 12:41 PM

    What are your thoughts, pray tell?

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    Mute justanothertaxpayer
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    Dec 1st 2014, 3:39 PM

    I am thinking he was just missing an ellipses…
    His thoughts are centred around precision.

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    Mute Steve M
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    Dec 1st 2014, 4:11 PM

    With everything getting automated and a growing world population, what happens when there aren’t enough jobs for everybody? A genuine question….maybe we will be starship troopers.

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