O'Malley Patrick M, Johnston Lloyd D, Delva Jorge, Bachman Jerald G, Schulenberg John E
Survey Research Center, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Am J Prev Med. 2007 Oct;33(4 Suppl):S187-94. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2007.07.001.
Body mass index (BMI) is known to vary by individual characteristics, but little is known about whether BMI varies by school and by school characteristics.
Nationally representative samples of United States schools and students are used to determine the extent to which BMI and percent of students at or above the 85th percentile of BMI vary by school and by school characteristics. Data from the 1991-2004 Monitoring the Future (MTF) study were analyzed in 2006 and 2007.
A relatively small proportion of variance in BMI lies between schools; intraclass correlations are on the order of 3%. Still, this is sufficient variation to provide very different environments for students attending schools that are low versus high in average BMI. There is some modest variation by school type (public, Catholic private, non-Catholic private); school size (number of students in the sampled grade); region of the country; and population density. There is more variation as a function of school socioeconomic status (SES) and racial/ethnic composition of the school. School SES in particular was negatively associated with BMI levels, even after controlling individual-level SES and racial/ethnic status.
The residual differences in BMI by school suggest that some characteristic of the school and/or community environment--perhaps cultural factors or peer role modeling or differences in school food, beverage, or physical education policies--facilitate obesity in schools with a high concentration of lower socioeconomic students, beyond individual-level factors.
已知体重指数(BMI)会因个体特征而有所不同,但对于BMI是否因学校及学校特征而异却知之甚少。
使用美国学校和学生的全国代表性样本,以确定BMI以及BMI处于或高于第85百分位数的学生百分比在不同学校及不同学校特征之间的差异程度。对1991 - 2004年未来监测(MTF)研究的数据于2006年和2007年进行了分析。
学校之间BMI的方差比例相对较小;组内相关系数约为3%。然而,这一差异足以让就读于平均BMI较低或较高学校的学生处于截然不同的环境中。学校类型(公立、天主教私立、非天主教私立)、学校规模(抽样年级的学生人数)、国家地区以及人口密度存在一定程度的适度差异。学校社会经济地位(SES)和学校的种族/族裔构成方面的差异更为明显。尤其是学校SES与BMI水平呈负相关,即便在控制了个体层面的SES和种族/族裔状况之后也是如此。
学校之间BMI的残余差异表明,学校和/或社区环境的某些特征——或许是文化因素、同伴榜样作用,或是学校食品、饮料或体育教育政策的差异——在个体层面因素之外,促使社会经济地位较低的学生高度集中的学校出现肥胖问题。