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News of Jan
6, 2007
Smarter Kids may turn into Safer Adults
London,
Jan 6
Smarter children may end up being safer adults then children with
lower intelligence, researchers found after comparing childhood
intelligence with adult injury rates.
Debbie Lawlor of the University of Bristol in England and colleagues
studied 11,282 people in Scotland who were part of a large childhood
development study in the 1950s and 1960s, reported Newswise wire.
The researchers found that early intelligence scores and the risk of
later injury were linked even after accounting for other factors
such as the child's socio-economic background and his or her
physical growth.
Children from the study who scored lower on intelligence tests at
ages seven, nine and 11 were more likely than their peers to be
hospitalized for an accidental injury as adults, said the study
published in the February issue of the American Journal of Public
Health.
"To our knowledge, this is the first study to examine the
relationship between childhood intelligence and risk of nonfatal
injury in adulthood," Lawlor said.
The researchers say there are several reasons why childhood
intelligence and adult injury might be linked.
First of all, children with lower intelligence are also more likely
to suffer injuries while young. If these injuries involve the head,
they may make the children more prone to accidents as adults.
The more educated a person, the weaker the link between childhood
intelligence and adult injury, the researchers found.
IANS
News of Jan
6, 2007
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