Rundle Andrew, Field Sam, Park Yoosun, Freeman Lance, Weiss Christopher C, Neckerman Kathryn
Mailman School of Public Health, Department of Epidemiology, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2008 Dec;67(12):1951-8. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.09.036. Epub 2008 Oct 25.
Past research has observed inverse associations between neighborhood and personal level measures of socioeconomic status and body mass index (BMI), but has not assessed how personal and neighborhood-level measures might interact together to predict BMI. Using a sample of 13,102 adult residents of New York City who participated in a health survey, cross-sectional multi-level analyses assessed whether personal income, education and Zip code-level poverty rates were associated with BMI. Demographic, income, education and objectively measured height and weight data were collected in the survey and poverty rates and the proportion of Black and Hispanic residents in the subject's Zip code were retrieved from the 2000 Census. Zip code-level population density and land use mix, indices of neighborhood walk-ability which are often higher in lower income neighborhoods and are associated with lower BMI, were also measured. After controlling for individual and Zip code-level demographic characteristics, increasing income was associated with lower BMI in women but not in men, and college and graduate level education was associated with lower BMI in both men and women. After control for income and individual and Zip code-level demographic characteristics, higher Zip code poverty rate was unassociated with BMI. However, as expected, indices of neighborhood walk-ability acted as substantial inverse confounders in the relationship between Zip code poverty rate and BMI. After further adjustment for indices of neighborhood walk-ability, Zip code poverty rate became significantly, and positively associated with BMI in women. Among women, the inverse association between income and BMI was significantly stronger in richer compared to poorer Zip codes. In men and women, the association between college and graduate education and lower BMI was significantly stronger in richer versus poorer Zip codes. These analyses suggest that neighborhood socioeconomic context influences how personal socioeconomic status interact in predicting boby size.
以往的研究发现,社区层面和个人层面的社会经济地位衡量指标与体重指数(BMI)之间存在负相关,但尚未评估个人和社区层面的指标如何相互作用以预测BMI。本研究以13102名参与健康调查的纽约市成年居民为样本,采用横断面多层次分析方法,评估个人收入、教育程度和邮政编码层面的贫困率与BMI之间的关联。调查收集了人口统计学、收入、教育程度以及客观测量的身高和体重数据,并从2000年人口普查中获取了邮政编码层面的贫困率以及受试者所在邮政编码区域内黑人及西班牙裔居民的比例。同时还测量了邮政编码层面的人口密度和土地利用混合情况,这些邻里可步行性指标在低收入社区通常较高,且与较低的BMI相关。在控制了个体和邮政编码层面的人口统计学特征后,收入增加与女性较低的BMI相关,而与男性无关,大学及研究生学历与男性和女性较低的BMI均相关。在控制了收入以及个体和邮政编码层面的人口统计学特征后,较高的邮政编码贫困率与BMI无关。然而,正如预期的那样,邻里可步行性指标在邮政编码贫困率与BMI之间的关系中起到了显著的反向混杂作用。在进一步调整邻里可步行性指标后,邮政编码贫困率与女性的BMI呈显著正相关。在女性中,与较贫困的邮政编码区域相比,较富裕地区收入与BMI之间的负相关显著更强。在男性和女性中,与较贫困的邮政编码区域相比,较富裕地区大学及研究生学历与较低BMI之间的关联显著更强。这些分析表明,社区社会经济背景会影响个人社会经济地位在预测身体尺寸方面的相互作用。