City
Epaper

Study links antibiotic exposure before age two to childhood obesity

By IANS | Updated: April 25, 2025 17:57 IST

New Delhi, April 25 Administering antibiotics within the first two years of life can raise children's risk of ...

Open in App

New Delhi, April 25 Administering antibiotics within the first two years of life can raise children's risk of developing higher body mass index (BMI), according to a new study.

Researchers from the University of Oulu in Finland found that children exposed to antibiotics in the first two years of life had a 9 per cent greater risk of being overweight; and a 20 per cent greater risk of becoming obese than children who were not exposed to the drugs.

However, the study found no correlation between BMI and antibiotic use before pregnancy, during pregnancy, or at birth.

"Antibiotic exposure in the first two years of life has a stronger association with childhood weight gain than exposure during pregnancy stages or other early ages," said Sofia Ainonen, a medical doctor at the University of Oulu.

"Providers need to be cautious about prescribing antibiotics for young toddlers, especially unnecessary antibiotics for upper respiratory tract infections," she added.

The study comes as childhood obesity is becoming a pressing issue worldwide, with over 159 million school-aged children diagnosed with obesity in 2022.

Being overweight in childhood can affect kids’ physical as well as mental health. It can affect their academic performance and quality of life, compounded by stigma, discrimination, and bullying.

It is also associated with greater risk and earlier onset of various non-communicable diseases, such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.

Previous studies have shown that antibiotics majorly impact the gut microbiota, which leads to obesity.

The study followed 33,095 vaginally born children in Finland to see if antibiotics before pregnancy, during the perinatal period, and after pregnancy was associated with higher BMI at age two and age 12.

The research was presented at the Paediatric Academic Societies (PAS) 2025 Meeting, held April 24–28 in Honolulu, Hawaii.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologySK Telecom's Q2 net income plunges after massive data breach

BusinessSK Telecom's Q2 net income plunges after massive data breach

Entertainment"Spectacular": Shibani Akhtar hails Farhan Akhtar's '120 Bahadur' teaser; Zoya Akhtar joins in

TechnologySouth Korea's HD Hyundai Heavy wins US Navy MRO project

EntertainmentShweta Tripathi: Queer stories aren’t seasonal

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyDefence Ministry gives nod for military hardware worth Rs 67,000 crore to beef up armed forces

TechnologyTorrent Power clocks 24.7 pc drop in net profit, revenue falls 12.5 pc

TechnologyParacetamol drug not banned in India, says Anupriya Patel

TechnologyBharti Hexacom Q1 profit drops 23 pc, revenue rises over 18 pc YoY

TechnologyBharti Airtel’s Q1 net profit jumps 57 pc to Rs 7,421.8 crore, revenue rises 28 pc