Mendez Michelle A, Monteiro Carlos A, Popkin Barry M
Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27516-3997, USA.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2005 Mar;81(3):714-21. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/81.3.714.
It is generally believed that overweight is less prevalent than undernutrition in the developing world, particularly in rural areas, and that it is concentrated in higher socioeconomic status (SES) groups.
The purpose of this study was to examine patterns of adult female overweight and underweight in the developing world by using categories of urban or rural status and SES strata.
Body mass index (BMI; in kg/m(2)) data collected in 36 countries from 1992 to 2000 by nationally representative cross-sectional surveys of women aged 20-49 y (n = 148579) were classified as indicating underweight (BMI < 18.5) and overweight (BMI >/= 25). Associations between the nutritional status of urban and rural women and each country's per capita gross national income (GNI) and level of urbanization were explored in the overall sample and among different SES groups.
Overweight exceeded underweight in well over half of the countries: the median ratio of overweight to underweight was 5.8 in urban and 2.1 in rural areas. Countries with high GNIs and high levels of urbanization had not only high absolute prevalences of overweight but also small urban-rural differences in overweight and very high ratios of overweight to underweight. In the more-developed countries, overweight among low-SES women was high in both rural (38%) and urban (51%) settings. Even many poor countries, countries in which underweight persists as a significant problem, had fairly high prevalences of rural overweight.
In most developing economies, prevalences of overweight in young women residing in both urban and rural areas are higher than those in underweight women, especially in countries at higher levels of socioeconomic development. Research is needed to assess male and child overweight to understand the dynamics facing these groups as well.
人们普遍认为,在发展中国家,尤其是农村地区,超重的发生率低于营养不良,且超重现象集中在社会经济地位较高的群体中。
本研究旨在通过城市或农村状况以及社会经济地位阶层类别,调查发展中国家成年女性超重和体重不足的模式。
1992年至2000年期间,在36个国家通过对20 - 49岁女性(n = 148579)进行具有全国代表性的横断面调查收集的体重指数(BMI;单位:kg/m²)数据,被分类为体重不足(BMI < 18.5)和超重(BMI ≥ 25)。在总体样本以及不同社会经济地位群体中,探讨了城乡女性营养状况与各国人均国民总收入(GNI)及城市化水平之间的关联。
在超过半数的国家中,超重人数超过体重不足人数:城市中超重与体重不足的中位数比例为5.8,农村为2.1。国民总收入高且城市化水平高的国家不仅超重的绝对发生率高,而且超重的城乡差异小,超重与体重不足的比例非常高。在较发达国家,低社会经济地位女性在农村(38%)和城市(51%)的超重发生率都很高。即使在许多贫困国家,体重不足仍是一个严重问题,但农村超重的发生率也相当高。
在大多数发展中经济体中,城乡年轻女性超重的发生率高于体重不足女性,尤其是在社会经济发展水平较高的国家。需要开展研究以评估男性和儿童超重情况,以便了解这些群体所面临的动态变化。