Gillum R F, Sempos Christopher T
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 3311 Toledo Road, Hyattsville, Maryland 20782, USA.
Nutr J. 2005 Oct 6;4:27. doi: 10.1186/1475-2891-4-27.
Few data have been published on the validity of classification of overweight and obesity based on self-reported weight in representative samples of Hispanic as compared to other American populations despite the wide use of such data.
To test the null hypothesis that ethnicity is unrelated to bias of mean body mass index (BMI) and to sensitivity of overweight or obesity (BMI > or = 25 kg/m2) derived from self-reported (SR) versus measured weight and height using measured BMI as the gold standard.
Cross-sectional survey of a large national sample, the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III) conducted in 1988-1994.
American men and women aged 20 years and over (n = 15,025).
SR height, weight, cigarette smoking, health status, and socio-demographic variables from home interview and measured weight and height.
In women and Mexican American (MA) men SR BMI underestimated true prevalence rates of overweight or obesity. For other men, no consistent difference was seen. Sensitivity of SR was similar in non-Hispanic European Americans (EA) and non-Hispanic African Americans (AA) but much lower in MA. Prevalence of obesity (BMI > or = 30 kg/m2) is consistently underestimated by self-report, the gap being greater for MA than for other women, but similar for MA and other men. The mean difference between self-reported and measured BMI was greater in MA (men -0.37, women -0.76 kg/m2) than in non-Hispanic EA (men -0.22, women -0.62 kg/m2). In a regression model with the difference between self-reported and measured BMI as the dependent variable, MA ethnicity was a significant (p < 0.01) predictor of the difference in men and in women. The effect of MA ethnicity could not be explained by socio-demographic variables, smoking or health status.
Under-estimation of the prevalence of overweight or obesity based on height and weight self-reported at interview varied significantly among ethnic groups independent of other variables.
尽管自我报告体重数据被广泛使用,但与其他美国人群相比,关于西班牙裔代表性样本中基于自我报告体重的超重和肥胖分类有效性的已发表数据很少。
检验种族与平均体重指数(BMI)偏差无关以及以测量的BMI为金标准时,自我报告(SR)与测量的体重和身高得出的超重或肥胖(BMI≥25kg/m²)敏感性无关的零假设。
对1988 - 1994年进行的第三次全国健康和营养检查调查(NHANES III)这一大型全国样本进行横断面调查。
20岁及以上的美国男性和女性(n = 15,025)。
来自家庭访谈的自我报告身高、体重、吸烟情况、健康状况和社会人口统计学变量,以及测量的体重和身高。
在女性和墨西哥裔美国(MA)男性中,自我报告的BMI低估了超重或肥胖的真实患病率。对于其他男性,未观察到一致的差异。非西班牙裔欧洲裔美国人(EA)和非西班牙裔非裔美国人(AA)中自我报告的敏感性相似,但在MA中则低得多。肥胖(BMI≥30kg/m²)的患病率通过自我报告一直被低估,MA女性的差距大于其他女性,但MA男性和其他男性相似。自我报告和测量的BMI之间的平均差异在MA中(男性 - 0.37,女性 - 0.76kg/m²)大于非西班牙裔EA(男性 - 0.22,女性 - 0.62kg/m²)。在以自我报告和测量的BMI之间的差异为因变量的回归模型中,MA种族是男性和女性差异的显著(p < 0.01)预测因素。MA种族的影响无法通过社会人口统计学变量、吸烟或健康状况来解释。
在访谈中基于自我报告的身高和体重对超重或肥胖患病率的低估在不同种族群体中差异显著,且与其他变量无关。