SLEEP AND BODY MASS INDEX IN THE FIRST YEAR OF LIFE: A BIRTH COHORT STUDY
Sleep Deprivation. Body mass index. Pediatric Obesity. Child.
Excess weight is configured as a serious global public health problem, with a continuous increase in its prevalence. It is also known that the obesity epidemic is proven by a trend in the reduction of sleep duration, being demonstrated in international and national studies that sleep deprivation is a risk factor for weight gain in long-term studies in adults and children. . Thus, the dissertation has the problem of interest in the relationship between sleep and mass index in the first year of life and is based on the physiological aspects of sleep weight, sleep, sleep, mechanistic relationships between sleep and overweight in childhood and in documents and actions compacted within the scope of public health that focus on sleep quality. No articles occurred during the mean sleep duration, night months and date with the mean BMI at 6 and 12 and its duration in the period of 6 months. In the linear birth and multivariate variables of univariate and multivariate birth of BMI, a negative identification of sleep duration for maternal variables was identified. On the grounds of a body of mental and quality evidence of increased genesis of obesity. However, there are still few actions in the country that consider the sleep component in comprehensive child care.