Wang Youfa, Zhang Qi
Center for Human Nutrition, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2006 Oct;84(4):707-16. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/84.4.707.
A good understanding of the association between obesity and socioeconomic status (SES) has many important public health and policies implications, particularly for the prevention and management of obesity.
The objective was to examine secular trends in the relations between overweight (body mass index > or = 95th percentile) and SES.
We examined secular trends in the relation between overweight and SES using nationally representative data collected in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES) between 1971 and 2002 for 30 417 US children aged 2-18 y. Poverty income ratio tertiles at each survey were used to indicate low, middle, and high SES.
Considerable race, sex, and age differences were observed in the association between overweight and SES. A reverse association only existed in white girls; African American children with a high SES were at increased risk. Socioeconomic disparities in overweight have changed over time, with an overall trend of weakening. Compared with the medium-SES group, the adjusted odds ratios and 95% CIs were 0.79 (0.47, 1.33), 1.08 (0.73, 1.61), 1.24 (0.73, 2.09), and 1.04 (0.82, 1.33) in NHANES I, II, and III and in the 1999-2002 NHANES for the low-SES group and 0.66 (0.43, 1.00), 0.60 (0.35, 1.03), 0.42 (0.23, 0.76), and 0.99 (0.68, 1.43) for the high-SES group, respectively. Between 1988-1994 and 1999-2002, the ratio in the prevalence of overweight between adolescent boys with a low or high SES decreased from 2.5 to 1.1 and from 3.1 to 1.6 in girls. Consistently across almost all SES groups, the prevalence of overweight was much higher in blacks than in whites.
Complex patterns in the association between SES and overweight exist. Efforts solely targeting reductions in income disparities probably cannot effectively reduce racial disparities in obesity.
深入了解肥胖与社会经济地位(SES)之间的关联具有诸多重要的公共卫生和政策意义,特别是对于肥胖的预防和管理而言。
本研究旨在探讨超重(体重指数≥第95百分位数)与SES之间关系的长期趋势。
我们利用1971年至2002年期间美国国家健康与营养检查调查(NHANES)收集的具有全国代表性的数据,对30417名2至18岁的美国儿童进行了超重与SES关系的长期趋势研究。每次调查中的贫困收入比三分位数用于表示低、中、高SES。
在超重与SES的关联中观察到显著的种族、性别和年龄差异。仅在白人女孩中存在负相关;高SES的非裔美国儿童超重风险增加。超重方面的社会经济差异随时间发生了变化,总体呈减弱趋势。与中等SES组相比,在NHANES I、II、III以及1999 - 2002年NHANES中,低SES组的调整优势比及95%置信区间分别为0.79(0.47,1.33)、1.08(0.73,1.61)、1.24(0.73,2.09)和1.04(0.82,1.33),高SES组分别为0.66(0.43,1.00)、0.60(0.35,1.03)、0.42(0.23,0.76)和0.99(0.68,1.43)。在1988 - 1994年至1999 - 2002年期间,低SES或高SES青少年男孩超重患病率之比从2.5降至1.1;女孩从3.1降至1.6。几乎在所有SES组中,黑人超重患病率均远高于白人。
SES与超重之间存在复杂的关联模式。仅致力于减少收入差距的努力可能无法有效降低肥胖方面的种族差异。