Authors
Susan MB Morton, Carin Napier, Manisha Morar, Karen Waldie, Elizabeth Peterson, Polly Atatoa Carr, Kane Meissel, Sarah-Jane Paine, Cameron C Grant, Pat Bullen, John Fenaughty, Amy Bird, Lisa Underwood, Clare Wall, Daniel Exeter, Kate Prickett, Te Kani Kingi, Renee Liang, Jacinta Fa’alili-Fidow, Sarah Gerritsen, Emma Marks, Caroline Walker, Fiona Langridge, Rebecca Evans, Denise Neumann, Molly Grant, Hakkan Lai, Seini Taufa, Ash Smith, Jane Cha
Publication date
2022/5/27
Journal
Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand
Volume
52
Issue
3
Pages
216-236
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
Growing Up in New Zealand is this country’s largest contemporary longitudinal study of child development. The study has been designed to provide insight into the lives of children and young people growing up in the context of twenty-first century New Zealand. The Growing Up in New Zealand cohort recruited 6853 children representative of the current ethnic and socioeconomic diversity of births in Aotearoa, New Zealand in 2009 and 2010. The developmental wellbeing of the children has been tracked in detail over their first thousand days of life and every two to three years since. While the majority of the cohort are growing up healthy and happy, a significant proportion of children are growing up in families who have been persistently burdened with multiple stressors associated with economic, material and social hardship. This has created a disproportionate burden of poorer overall wellbeing outcomes and …
Total citations
202220232024222
Scholar articles
SMB Morton, C Napier, M Morar, K Waldie, E Peterson… - Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand, 2022