PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

General cognitive but not mathematic abilities predict very preterm and healthy term born adults' wealth.

  • Julia Jaekel,
  • Nicole Baumann,
  • Peter Bartmann,
  • Dieter Wolke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212789
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
p. e0212789

Abstract

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ObjectiveVery preterm (Methods193 VP/VLBW and 217 healthy term comparison participants were studied prospectively from birth to adulthood as part of a geographically defined study in Bavaria (South Germany). Mathematic and general cognitive abilities were assessed at 8 years with standardized tests; wealth information was assessed at 26 years with a structured interview and summarized into a comprehensive index score. All scores were z-standardized.ResultsAt 8 years, VP/VLBW (n = 193, 52.3% male) had lower mathematic and general cognitive abilities than healthy term comparison children (n = 217, 47.0% male). At 26 years, VP/VLBW had accumulated significantly lower overall wealth than term born comparison adults (-0.57 (1.08) versus -0.01 (1.00), mean difference 0.56 [0.36-0.77], p ConclusionThis longitudinal study from birth to adulthood shows that VP/VLBW survivors' general cognitive rather than specific mathematic problems explain their diminished life-course success. These findings are important in order to design effective interventions at school age that reduce the burden of prematurity for those individuals who were born at highest neonatal risk.