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PRegnancy and Infant DEvelopment Study (PRIDE)
PRegnancy and Infant DEvelopment Study logo
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Sample details

The PRIDE study aims to assess the influence of prenatal and postnatal factors towards maternal health and child development. Beginning in 2011, the study initially included 725 participants from the Netherlands; the study continued to enrol participants, reaching 9,573 women by September 2019. Participants include women aged 18 and above who are recruited during pregnancy. Data collection occurs at 17 and 34 weeks of pregnancy, 2 and 6 months after birth and bi-annually until the child reaches 21.

Study design
Cohort - birth, Cohort - open

Number of participants at first data collection

9,573 (participants as of 2019)

Recruitment is ongoing

Age at first data collection

≥ 18 years (participants)

Participant year of birth

Varied (participants)

Participant sex
All

Representative sample at baseline?
No

Sample features

Mother and child dyad
Mothers
Pregnant people
Dataset details

Country

Netherlands

Year of first data collection

2011

Primary Institutions

Radboud University Medical Center (Radboudumc)

Links

pridestudy.nl/study-design/

doi.org/10.1111/ppe.12023

Profile paper DOI

doi.org/10.1111/ppe.12618

Funders

Lung Foundation Netherlands (Longfonds)

Radboud University Medical Center (Radboudumc)

The Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (ZonMW)

Ongoing?
Yes

Data types collected

mentalHealthData
dataLinkage
Quantitative data collection
  • Computer, paper or task testing (e.g. cognitive testing, theory of mind doll task, attention computer tasks)
  • Physical or biological assessment (e.g. blood, saliva, gait, grip strength, anthropometry)
  • Secondary data
  • Self-report questionnaire – online
  • Self-report questionnaire – paper or computer assisted
Qualitative data collection
  • None
Neuroimaging data collection
  • None
Linked or secondary data
  • Healthcare data
  • Medical birth registry
Features

Engagement

  • Community engagement
  • Keywords

    Biological samples/biospecimens
    Exposure - outcome associations
    Human development
    Infancy and early childhood
    Lifestyle factors
    Maternal health
    Maternal mental health
    Pre-pregnancy
    Pregnancy-birth cohort
    Prenatal exposures
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