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Changes in atopy prevalence and sibship effect in rural population at all ages

Background We examined the associations of family size and birth order with atopy prevalence in rural Poland at two time periods. Methods Two cross‐sectional surveys were conducted in the same villages and a small town of lower Silesia at an interval of 9 years. In 2003, 1700 (88% of eligible indivi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Allergy (Copenhagen) 2015-06, Vol.70 (6), p.661-666
Main Authors: Sozańska, B., Pearce, N., Błaszczyk, M., Boznański, A., Cullinan, P.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Background We examined the associations of family size and birth order with atopy prevalence in rural Poland at two time periods. Methods Two cross‐sectional surveys were conducted in the same villages and a small town of lower Silesia at an interval of 9 years. In 2003, 1700 (88% of eligible individuals), and in 2012, 1730 (86%) inhabitants aged 5 years or more completed a questionnaire and had a skin prick test for atopy. Results There was an inverse association between family size and atopy in the village population in 2003; the prevalence of atopy was the highest for those with no siblings (15.2%) and decreased to 5.4% for those with three and more siblings (OR = 0.22; 0.07–0.66). In contrast, there was little or no such protective effect in the town population where the prevalence of atopy was much higher (7.3% in the villages, 20.0% in the town). Nine years later, the prevalence of atopy had increased in the village to be similar to that in the town (19.6% and 19.9% respectively), and the protective effects of family size and birth order in the villages were much weaker (OR = 0.64; 95% CI 0.33–1.27 for three or more siblings). Both protective effects were strongest among children. Conclusions The protective effects of family size and birth order on atopy were much stronger in children than in adults and among those living in a village. They largely disappeared with the steep increase in atopy prevalence at all ages; this followed environmental changes on the village farms.
ISSN:0105-4538
1398-9995
DOI:10.1111/all.12623