Han E, Truesdale K P, Taber D R, Cai J, Juhaeri J, Stevens J
Department of Nutrition, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.
Int J Obes (Lond). 2009 Feb;33(2):249-56. doi: 10.1038/ijo.2008.193. Epub 2009 Jan 20.
To examine associations between weight status and number of all-cause and cause-specific hospitalizations overall, and by race and gender.
Longitudinal cohort study.
White and black adults (n=15 355) from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study who were normal weight (body mass index: >or=18.5 to <25.0 kg m(-2); n=4997), overweight (>or=25.0 to <30.0 kg m(-2); n=6100), or obese (>or=30.0 kg m(-2); n=4258) at baseline.
Information on hospitalizations was collected using community and cohort surveillance methods. Negative binomial models adjusted for race, gender, field center, age, physical activity, education level, smoking status, alcoholic beverage consumption and health insurance at baseline. Adjusted numbers of hospitalizations were calculated after setting covariates to the mean value (for continuous variables) or to the average distribution (for categorical variables) observed in the entire cohort and are expressed as the number of hospitalizations per 1000 adults followed over a period of 13 years.
The covariate-adjusted average number of all-cause hospitalizations was 1316 per 1000 normal weight, 1543 per 1000 overweight and 2025 per 1000 obese. Normal weight women had significantly fewer hospitalizations than normal weight men (1173 versus 1515 per 1000), but the increase associated with being obese on the number of all-cause hospitalizations was larger in women than men (791 versus 589 per 1000). There was no significant difference detected between the number of hospitalizations in normal weight whites and blacks, and the increase in hospitalizations with overweight or obesity was also not different. Effects of weight status on several primary causes of hospitalization differed by gender and race group.
Our work suggests that obesity prevention may reduce hospitalizations, a major component of rising healthcare costs. The impact of successful obesity prevention is likely to be larger in women than in men, and similar in blacks and whites.
研究总体上以及按种族和性别划分的体重状况与全因住院次数及特定病因住院次数之间的关联。
纵向队列研究。
来自社区动脉粥样硬化风险研究的白人和黑人成年人(n = 15355),在基线时体重正常(体重指数:≥18.5至<25.0 kg/m²;n = 4997)、超重(≥25.0至<30.0 kg/m²;n = 6100)或肥胖(≥30.0 kg/m²;n = 4258)。
使用社区和队列监测方法收集住院信息。采用负二项模型,对种族、性别、研究中心、年龄、身体活动、教育水平、吸烟状况、酒精饮料消费和基线时的健康保险进行调整。在将协变量设定为整个队列中观察到的平均值(对于连续变量)或平均分布(对于分类变量)后,计算调整后的住院次数,并表示为每1000名成年人在13年期间的住院次数。
经协变量调整后,每1000名体重正常者的全因住院平均次数为1316次,超重者为1543次,肥胖者为2025次。体重正常的女性住院次数显著少于体重正常的男性(每1000人分别为1173次和1515次),但肥胖导致的全因住院次数增加在女性中比男性更大(每1000人分别为791次和589次)。体重正常的白人和黑人住院次数没有显著差异,超重或肥胖导致的住院次数增加也没有差异。体重状况对几种主要住院病因的影响因性别和种族组而异。
我们的研究表明,预防肥胖可能会减少住院次数,而住院是医疗费用不断上涨的一个主要因素。成功预防肥胖对女性的影响可能大于男性,对黑人和白人的影响相似。