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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2012 Feb 24.
Published in final edited form as: Psychiatry Res. 2005 Jun 30;135(3):203–216. doi: 10.1016/j.psychres.2005.04.003

Table 1.

The effect of alcohol, cigarette, and drug exposure during pregnancy and child/adolescent BMI

8–11 years
12–15 years
16–18 years
df χ2 P df χ2 P df χ2 P
Alcohol use 1 0.55 ns 1 0.001 ns 1 0.03 ns
Age 3 121.39 <0.0001 3 86.97 <0.0001 2 19.36 0.001
Gender 1 0.24 ns 1 0.06 ns 1 1.36 ns
Family type 1 1.06 ns 1 1.69 ns 1 3.11 ns
Sibling 1 0.20 ns 1 0.05 ns 1 0.34 ns
Depression in mother 1 0.90 ns 1 0.17 ns 1 0.09 ns
Gender × family type 1 1.38 ns 1 0.98 ns 1 1.76 ns
Cigarettes 1 9.94 0.002 1 8.16 0.004 1 4.00 0.05
Age 3 118.44 <0.0001 3 96.78 <0.0001 2 17.96 <0.0001
Gender 1 0.05 ns 1 0.009 ns 1 0.57 ns
Family type 1 0.11 ns 1 0.26 ns 1 1.08 ns
Sibling 1 0.55 ns 1 0.26 ns 1 0.12 ns
Depression in mother 1 0.01 ns 1 1.80 ns 1 0.15 ns
Gender × family type 1 0.47 ns 1 0.30 ns 1 0.61 ns
Drugs 1 0.08 ns 1 0.27 ns 1 8.29 0.004
Age 3 115.08 <0.0001 3 97.28 <0.0001 2 19.34 <0.0001
Gender 1 0.14 ns 1 0.02 ns 1 0.91 ns
Family type 1 0.95 ns 1 1.31 ns 1 1.82 ns
Sibling 1 0.10 ns 1 0.06 ns 1 0.07 ns
Depression in mother 1 0.22 ns 1 0.81 ns 1 0.24 ns
Gender × family type 1 1.01 ns 1 0.77 ns 1 1.27 ns

Exposure is presented as a dichotomous variable (no exposure versus any exposure). The same model was analyzed for data obtained at each developmental period.