Girls born heavier are more likely to develop obesity by the time they're young adults, researchers have found.
A just-published study led by Kiwi and Swedish scientists found that women born heavy weighed nearly 4kg more than an average by their mid-twenties – when they were also 50 per cent more likely to become obese.
It offered some of the strongest evidence yet that being born heavier – or what's known as "large for gestational age", or LGA - puts us at greater risk of developing obesity in adult life, regardless of our length and body proportion at birth.
The researchers studied data from nearly 200,000 Swedish women who had their birth weight and length recorded in the Swedish Birth Register, and who were later assessed when they became pregnant at the average age of 26 years.
About one in 16 of the women were born LGA, which meant at or above the 95th percentile – or in the top five per cent of the population - according to weight or length.