Data relating to maternal fish consumption, methylmercury exposure, and early child neurodevelopment in the traditional living of Western Amazonians
This data paper includes information of a cohort organized to study the health, nutrition, and development of Amazonian children [1]. Child development were evaluated by trained nurses and psychologists with the Bayley Scales of Infant Development (at 24 months), the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scal...
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doaj-ec9273731e744b54b1274e6f9e02657a2020-11-24T22:06:22ZengElsevierData in Brief2352-34092019-08-0125Data relating to maternal fish consumption, methylmercury exposure, and early child neurodevelopment in the traditional living of Western AmazoniansRejane C. Marques0José G. Dórea1Monica P.L. Cunha2Thayssa C.S. Bello3José V.E. Bernardi4Olaf Malm5Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Corresponding author.Universidade de Brasilia, BrazilUniversidade Federal de Rondonia, BrazilUniversidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, BrazilUniversidade de Brasilia, BrazilUniversidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, BrazilThis data paper includes information of a cohort organized to study the health, nutrition, and development of Amazonian children [1]. Child development were evaluated by trained nurses and psychologists with the Bayley Scales of Infant Development (at 24 months), the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale (at 60 months) and also with questionnaires administered by trained interviewers to the mothers. Maternal food questionnaires were used to estimate fish consumption and the associations between levels of prenatal and postnatal hair mercury (from mothers and children) and scores of neurodevelopment. Keywords: Child development, Fish, Methylmercury, Prenatal exposure, Hair mercuryhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340919305074 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Rejane C. Marques José G. Dórea Monica P.L. Cunha Thayssa C.S. Bello José V.E. Bernardi Olaf Malm |
spellingShingle |
Rejane C. Marques José G. Dórea Monica P.L. Cunha Thayssa C.S. Bello José V.E. Bernardi Olaf Malm Data relating to maternal fish consumption, methylmercury exposure, and early child neurodevelopment in the traditional living of Western Amazonians Data in Brief |
author_facet |
Rejane C. Marques José G. Dórea Monica P.L. Cunha Thayssa C.S. Bello José V.E. Bernardi Olaf Malm |
author_sort |
Rejane C. Marques |
title |
Data relating to maternal fish consumption, methylmercury exposure, and early child neurodevelopment in the traditional living of Western Amazonians |
title_short |
Data relating to maternal fish consumption, methylmercury exposure, and early child neurodevelopment in the traditional living of Western Amazonians |
title_full |
Data relating to maternal fish consumption, methylmercury exposure, and early child neurodevelopment in the traditional living of Western Amazonians |
title_fullStr |
Data relating to maternal fish consumption, methylmercury exposure, and early child neurodevelopment in the traditional living of Western Amazonians |
title_full_unstemmed |
Data relating to maternal fish consumption, methylmercury exposure, and early child neurodevelopment in the traditional living of Western Amazonians |
title_sort |
data relating to maternal fish consumption, methylmercury exposure, and early child neurodevelopment in the traditional living of western amazonians |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
Data in Brief |
issn |
2352-3409 |
publishDate |
2019-08-01 |
description |
This data paper includes information of a cohort organized to study the health, nutrition, and development of Amazonian children [1]. Child development were evaluated by trained nurses and psychologists with the Bayley Scales of Infant Development (at 24 months), the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale (at 60 months) and also with questionnaires administered by trained interviewers to the mothers. Maternal food questionnaires were used to estimate fish consumption and the associations between levels of prenatal and postnatal hair mercury (from mothers and children) and scores of neurodevelopment. Keywords: Child development, Fish, Methylmercury, Prenatal exposure, Hair mercury |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340919305074 |
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