TY - CHAP M1 - Book, Section TI - Reproductive Health and Child and Adolescent Health and Development A1 - Drake, Alison A1 - Bukusi, Elizabeth A1 - Ross, David A1 - Batra, Maneesh A1 - Denno, Donna A1 - John-Stewart, Grace A2 - Boulton, Matthew L. A2 - Wallace, Robert B. PY - 2022 T2 - Maxcy-Rosenau-Last Public Health & Preventive Medicine, 16e AB - Reproductive health and child and adolescent health and development are inextricably linked. Declines in fertility rates often occur in tandem with economic and educational advancement and are associated with benefits in child health. Infant health (in the first 1000 days since conception) can influence longer-term child, adolescent, and adult health. Maternal nutrition and quality of life influences long-term child outcomes. Child nutrition and infections may alter neurodevelopment and long-term educational and vocational outcomes. Finally, adolescent health may influence adult outcomes and reproductive decision-making as well as next-generation health. Together these intertwined areas contribute a perspective of lifecycle trajectories that addresses outcomes for each population (mothers, infants, children, and adolescents) not in silos—recognizing that each group has distal impact on the other groups and that addressing these relationships at critical windows of risk (preconception adolescence, pregnancy, delivery, neonatal, under-5, and teen years) with tailored interventions could leverage opportunities to improve outcomes of mother-child, adolescent-adult, neonate-child (Fig. 22-1). SN - PB - McGraw Hill CY - New York, NY Y2 - 2024/03/28 UR - accessmedicine.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?aid=1182683237 ER -