英国の子どもは背が高くなっているが、その理由は健康的とは言えない(British children are growing taller but not for the right reasons)

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2026-03-03 オックスフォード大学

オックスフォード大学などの研究チームは、英国の子どもたちの身長が近年高くなっている一方で、その背景が必ずしも健康的とは言えない可能性を示した。研究では長期的な健康・成長データを分析し、子どもの平均身長の上昇が必ずしも栄養状態や健康改善を反映しているわけではなく、肥満の増加や生活習慣の変化と関連している可能性を指摘した。特に体格指数(BMI)の上昇とともに身長の伸びが見られるケースが増えており、これは早期の成長促進や思春期の変化と関係している可能性がある。研究は、子どもの健康状態を評価する際に単に身長の増加だけを見るのではなく、体重、栄養、生活環境など複合的な指標を考慮する必要があると強調している。

<関連情報>

「英国の子どもの身長は縮んでいない」が、子どもの身長は間違った理由で伸びている:イングランド、スコットランド、ウェールズの子どもの身長測定プログラムデータの傾向と不平等 ‘British children are not shrinking’, but child height is increasing for the wrong reasons: trends and inequalities in child measurement programme data for England, Scotland and Wales

Andrew Moscrop,Danny Dorling,Tim Cole
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health  Published: March 2, 2026
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1136/jech-2025-225029

英国の子どもは背が高くなっているが、その理由は健康的とは言えない(British children are growing taller but not for the right reasons)

Abstract

Background News media have reported that the average height of British children is falling, but these reports have been contested. Child Measurement Programmes (CMPs) operate in schools in England, Scotland and Wales, but their height data have been inaccessible, allowing conflicting claims about trends in child height to remain unresolved. Here, we aim to describe and explain trends and socioeconomic inequalities in child height using the best available evidence.

Methods Freedom of information requests were submitted to relevant authorities in England, Scotland and Wales, requesting annual CMP height and obesity data, stratified by sex, ethnicity and deprivation to 2023/2024. Mean height and obesity prevalence were plotted against time by age group, sex and deprivation group.

Results The COVID-19 pandemic prompted school closures in Britain, disrupting CMP data collection. This period was associated with sharp but transient increases in obesity prevalence and mean height. Before COVID-19, mean height increased, particularly among children in deprived areas. Children in deprived areas also showed the greatest increases in obesity and overweight prevalence. Narrowing socioeconomic inequalities in child height in Britain have been associated with widening inequalities in obesity.

Conclusions This work complements research describing a causal link from child obesity to increased height during childhood and implies mean height may be an unreliable indicator of child health when obesity is prevalent and rising. In Britain, increases in overall mean child height and narrowing socioeconomic inequalities in child height during the 21st century may reflect widening inequalities in obesity and worsening health among deprived children.

医療・健康
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